Not-so-official (!!) German Primer
Umm... How is du transformed into ich? Of course, I'm only in German I, what do I know..
Germany- Deutschland
German- deutsch
English- englisch
to speak- sprechen
normal conjugation chart (endings)
Singular:
ich (I) -e
du (you informal) -st
er/sie/es (he/she/it) -t
Plural:
wir (we) -en
ihr (you informal) -t
sie (they) -en
Sie (you formal, both singular and plural) -en
Thus, the conjugation of sprechen is ich spreche, du sprechst, er/sie/es sprecht, wir sprechen, ihr sprecht, sie sprechen, Sie sprechen.
However, some verbs aren't normal, such as sein (to be), wissen (to know a fact), and haben (to have).
Sein
ich bin
du bist
er/sie/est ist
wir sind
ihr seid
sie sind
Sie sind
I don't know wissen yet, German this year is useless... All I know is weiss, which is "I know".
Haben
ich habe
du hast
er/sie/es hat
wir haben
ihr habt
sie haben
Sie haben
Good in terms of time of day is guten, eg. guten morgen = good morning. Times of day include:
Morgen - morning
Abend- afternoon
Nachmittag- evening
Nacht- night
The formal greeting is "Guten Tag", but you can just say "Wie geht's?" (How's it going, basically). "Wie geht es Ihnen?" is formal. There are a bunch of other greetings as well. "Wilkommen" is welcome.
As for goodbye, "Auf Wiedersehen" is formal, but "Bis später" is "See you later", and there are a few more that I can't remember... This is getting too long.
0-20
null
eins
zwei
drei
vier
fünf
sechs
sieben
acht
neun
zehn
elf
zwölf
dreizehn (lit. three-ten)
vierzehn
fünfzen
sechzehn
siebzehn
achtzehn
neunzehn
zwanzig
(Null means zero, but no as in "I have no computer" would be kein, so "Ich habe kein Computer." As was said before, nein is no as in "No, that's not right." Ja is yes. Most people know those two.)
Other than that, they're mainly the number with -zig for tens up to 90, digits are added to the front with -und after them.
siebenundsiebzig = 77
The exception is 30, which is dreissig.
Oh, and how to say "I speak German"-- Ich spreche deutsch. Fairly easy. Languages aren't capitalized, unless it's a school subject.
I don't know- Ich weiss nicht.
I don't understand- Ich verstehe nicht.
Boy- der Junge
Girl - das Mädchen (It's using the neuter form of the for some reason, but then again, language doesn't make sense.)
Can't really think of anything else, there's a bunch of stuff that I forgot, though.
Working on one for Latin, RyanX would probably do better, as I just learned the past forms a few months ago.