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  • The DER or Designated Employer Representative
    The acronym DER stands for Designated Employer Representative A DER is the person in charge of an employer’s drug and alcohol testing program and is often also called the drug and alcohol testing program manager
  • Der, die, das: Learning German Gender Rules - Duolingo Blog
    German has different words for “the” depending on a noun’s gender Here are the most important patterns for deciding between “der,” “die,” and “das”!
  • German Article Rules — Der, Die, Das Cheat Sheet Quiz
    German article rules help you predict whether a noun takes der (masculine), die (feminine), or das (neuter)
  • The Ultimate Guide to Der, Die and Das - FluentU
    "Der," "die" and "das" can confuse any language learner, but with some helpful tricks you can master these German articles for "the " Click here to learn how to nail them in every situation so you don't get tripped up on a common word
  • der - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
    der (dummy pronoun) there (expletive word put in the subject field when the subject is postponed to the predicate field, typically with indefinite subjects or subjectless passive verbs)
  • Der, Die, Das — German Articles Gender
    Every German noun has a grammatical gender — masculine (der), feminine (die), or neuter (das) Gender determines which articles and endings to use and must be memorized with each noun
  • Der, die, das – Tips and Tricks When to Use Which Article
    When learning new nouns in German, you should always learn it with its definite article: der, die, or das There are some rules as to which article to use with what kinds of nouns, but unfortunately there are many words that don’t follow the rules and where the choice of the article seems arbitrary or even counterintuitive
  • Indefinite and Definite German Articles: Get To Know Der, Die, Das, and . . .
    German has three definite articles: der for masculine nouns, die for feminine nouns, and das for neutral nouns For the above examples, it makes sense that the articles are “gendered,” as the nouns indicate a male, a female, and a gender-neutral description of children


















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