- 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 — 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
- German Definite Articles — Der, Die, Das Explained (+ Quiz)
What is the difference between “der” and “den”? Der is the masculine nominative article (subject), while den is the masculine accusative article (direct object) and also the dative plural article
- 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
- Basic Chart: der das die, ein-words, Pronouns – German Resources
Learn the two charts on this page well, and everything else you do in German will become a lot easier for you!
- Cracking the Code of der, die, das: Mastering German Articles
Unlike English, German assigns every noun one of three grammatical genders: masculine (der), feminine (die), or neuter (das) And no, it’s not about biological gender
- German Articles: Der, Die or Das? (With Examples) - Busuu
Learning definite articles in German? Let’s look at the three German articles der, die and das and understand how to use them correctly with German nouns
- 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)
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