ich in A Sentence

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    Ich bin ein Berliner.

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    2

    The I Das Ich.

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    3

    Research for Safeguarding Endangered Ich.

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    4

    Yes, it's an Ich patient.

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    Ich und Du.

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    Research Database on Ich Safeguarding in the Asia- Pacific Region.

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    7

    The I('Das Ich') itself sets this situation up for itself(it posits itself).

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    8

    When John F. Kennedy's said,“Ich bin ein Berliner,” Germans did not think he said,“I am a jelly doughnut.”.

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    9

    The“Ich bin ein Berliner” part of the speech was actually borrowed from an earlier speech given by Kennedy on May 4, 1962.

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    10

    Shh. Hello. Ich bin HeinrIch Von Fuchs, and I would like to welcome you to Fuchtopia, where great men and women are made greater.

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    11

    All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin, and therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words,"Ich bin ein Berliner!"!

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    12

    All- all free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin, and, therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words:“Ich bin ein Berliner.”!

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    13

    Yet another linguist, Jürgen EIchhoff, in his paper covering the misconception stated,“‘Ich bin ein Berliner' is not only correct, but the one and only correct way of expressing in German what the President intended to say.”.

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    14

    The fact that this is a myth shouldn't be a surprise to many because if“Ich bin ein Berliner” had been interpreted,“I am a jelly-filled doughnut”, it likely would have been major comedic news at the time.

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    15

    Had he said“Ich bin Berliner”, he would have been saying he was literally a citizen of Berlin, whIch isn't true at all, nor the sentiment he was trying to express(more or less,“I was not born here and do not live here, but I am one of you.”).

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    16

    The misconception primary stems from Kennedy's use of the indefinite article“ein”, rather than saying just“Ich bin Berliner”, as well as the fact that a“Berliner” is also known, mainly in far western parts of Western Germany at the time, as the name of a certain type of pastry created in Berlin around the 16th century.

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