False Friends in German and English | Lingoda

Publish date: 2024-06-27

What are false friends?

You’re learning German, doing well, ordering coffee and thanking grocery cashiers all the time. But a brief chat with your neighbour gets you a stern look instead of thanks, and you wonder what happened. I mean, you just said you’d bring them a gift for watering your plants when you were away!

Ah, it could only mean one thing. False friends. It refers to words that look the same in German and English, but have very different meanings, not that guy who never shows up to help you move even though he said he would. Well, technically he is a false friend too, but you can cull your Facebook friends later.

Poison is a Gift?

If you’re Denglishing (speaking a mix of German and English) your sentences still, watch out for this one. You may think you’re promising something pleasant to someone, but they may very well report you to the police. Gift means poison in German. The word you’re actually looking for is Geschenk.

present-gift

Bekommen

This is a classic one that confuses German learners and Germans learning English. Bekommen in German means to get or receive something. Jeder Junge bekommt ein Stück Kuchen, for instance, means ‘Each boy gets a slice of cake’ – no one is turning young boys into cake, despite how much that sounds like a lesser-known Brothers Grimm tale. To talk about someone becoming something, the verb you need in German is ‘werden’.

boy-eating-cake

Aktuell

If you don’t get this one right in English, it feels like mansplainers are everywhere. Aktuell in German means ‘current’ or ‘currently’ depending on the context. To tediously start a sentence with ‘Actually…’ you will want to use eigentlich. Or don’t. But I leave that up to you.

Dose/dosis

Unless you’re in a medical field or prepping for the apocalypse, it might be quite a while in your German-learning journey before you come across this one. Dose in German refers to a can of something, like a can of beans is Dosenbohnen. But if you want to explain you’ve only had one dose of painkillers, you would say eine Dosis. Personally, I don’t love canned beans but I know they are good for me, so it feels like a dose of fiber when I eat them.

beans-chickpeas-lentils

Hut/Hütte

When my son asked me what pizza had to do with hats, I admit I was very confused. I have since learned this is a common mix-up in Germany, as the logo of a popular American pizza chain with the red roof also looks like a hat, which doesn’t help. Hut in German means ‘hat’ rather than a small building. What in English would be a ‘hut’ is Hütte in German. I will forever call that place Pizza Hat now though, which earns me an eye roll from my son every time. Worth it.

pizza

Mist

No, that person fumbling for their train ticket when the conductor shows up is not mumbling about the weather. Mist is German for that all-purpose English word ‘crap’. You can even say um Mist zu reden, which means ‘to talk crap’ about something. Of course if you would like to be polite and talk about the weather, you would be referring to Nebel. If it was very misty and then you stepped in something noxious, yes, that could be Hundemist (‘dog crap’).

Bald

You will hear people calling out to each other, Bis bald! which brings to mind shiny heads devoid of hair to English speakers. Possibly more distressingly, when a waiter lets you know your food will be up shortly, and they say Es kommt bald. No one is commenting on your hair loss, not out loud anyway. Bald means soon, in German. Make sure you’re going with the ‘ah’ sound for the vowel sound, and you can banish hair from your mind. Of course, if you would like to discuss someone’s baldness, Er hat eine Glatze will work.

bald-man

Erin McGann

Erin McGann is a Canadian freelance writer focusing on travel, living abroad, parenting, history, and culture. After nearly a decade living in the UK, Erin settled in Heidelberg, Germany with her husband and son. Dragging her family to every castle and open-air museum is a favourite activity, along with sewing, archery, and historical reenactment. You can check out her travel blog, and follow her obsession with half-timbered houses on her Instagram account.

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