To feel like doing something, to be up for something.
„Was geht ab?“ or „Alles fit?“ (What's up? / Everything good?) colloquial german vk exclusive
To turn this guide into an actionable strategy within your VK study groups, try the following steps: To feel like doing something, to be up for something
“I mean the social network VK — give examples of German slang only used there.” B. “VK is a typo — I just want a general report on colloquial German.” C. “There is a specific leaked PDF/course called ‘Colloquial German VK Exclusive’ — find info about it.” D. “I made a mistake — ignore VK. Just give me a report on colloquial German.” “VK is a typo — I just want
Don't just read the slang; speak it aloud. Pay attention to how words are clipped and slurred together.
This is the casual, everyday language spoken by natives in the streets, in bars, and over text messages. It includes heavy slang, clipped words, regional dialects, and idioms that strictly bypass the rules of Hochdeutsch (Standard German).
Consistent with standard CMC, VK German employs truncation, but with specific local twists.