Der 1. Fall ist der Nominativ. Er bestimmt das Subjekt eines Satzes, weshalb er auch gerne als Wer-oder-Was-Fall bezeichnet wird. Ein Beispiel: Wer kommt? Der Mann. Der Genitiv, auch Wessen-Fall ...
The Oder and its longest tributaries The Oder is 840 kilometres (522 miles) long: 112 km (70 miles) in the Czech Republic, 726 km (451 miles) in Poland (including 187 km (116 miles) on the border between Germany and Poland). It is the third longest river located within Poland (after the Vistula and Warta); however, it is the second longest river overall taking into account its total length ...
From the confluence of the Lusatian Neisse river to the dividing into Western Oder and Eastern Oder, it marks the border between Germany and Poland (163 km). Like other large rivers, the Oder has played a key role in the lives of the people living in its neighbourhood.
Oder River, river of east-central Europe. It is one of the most significant rivers in the catchment basin of the Baltic Sea, second only to the Vistula in discharge and length. For the first 70 miles (112 kilometres) from its source, it passes through the Czech Republic.
The Oder River became the far eastern border of Germany after World War II for some 187km (116mi). The country’s borders didn’t change the river itself, it’s still one of the longest in Europe going on for 866km — eventually flowing out into the Baltic Sea.
Together with the Bydgoszcz Canal, it is connected to the Western European waterway system via the Oder-Spree and Oder-Havel canals in eastern Germany. Location and map of the Oder