What does Wem gehört die Erde? in German mean?

What is the meaning of the word Wem gehört die Erde? in German? The article explains the full meaning, pronunciation along with bilingual examples and instructions on how to use Wem gehört die Erde? in German.

The word Wem gehört die Erde? in German means belong to, belong with, require, be appropriate, take, fit, belong to, not belong, not belong to anything, belong to. To learn more, please see the details below.

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Meaning of the word Wem gehört die Erde?

belong to

(im Besitz von jdm sein) (ownership)

Dieses Buch gehört Paul.
This book belongs to Paul.

belong with

(Teil von [etw] sein)

Paul gehört zum roten Team.
Paul belongs to the red team.

require

(notwendig sein)

Diese Sachen gehören weggeräumt.
These things need to be cleaned up.

be appropriate

(angemessen sein)

Dieses Verhalten gehört sich nicht beim Essen.
This behavior is not appropriate at dinner.

take

(erfordern)

Es gehört viel Feingefühl dazu, so gute Musik zu produzieren.
It takes a lot of sensitivity to produce music that good.

fit

(die richtige Ordnung haben)

Dieser Deckel gehört nicht zu dieser Flasche.
This top does not fit that bottle.

belong to

(Teil von [etw]/jmdm sein)

Die Bären gehören zu den Säugetieren.
Bears belong to the group of mammals.

not belong

(ohne Eigentümer)

not belong to anything

(ohne Bezug sein)

belong to

(Teil von [etw] sein)

Anne gehört zu den Menschen, die gut zuhören können.

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Do you know about German

German (Deutsch) is a West Germanic language spoken mainly in Central Europe. It is the official language in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, South Tyrol (Italy), the German-speaking community in Belgium, and Liechtenstein; It is also one of the official languages in Luxembourg and the Polish province of Opolskie. As one of the major languages in the world, German has about 95 million native speakers globally and is the language with the largest number of native speakers in the European Union. German is also the third most commonly taught foreign language in the United States (after Spanish and French) and the EU (after English and French), the second most used language in science[12] and the third most used language on the Internet (after English and Russian). There are approximately 90–95 million people who speak German as a first language, 10–25 million as a second language, and 75–100 million as a foreign language. Thus, in total, there are about 175–220 million German speakers worldwide.