Learn some German -- Things you might need -- Stay in Berlin -- Sightseeing in Berlin
- Hallo - Hello
- Guten Tag - Good Morning
- Guten Abend - Good Evening
- Frühstück - Breakfast
- Mittagessen - Lunch
- Abendbrot - Dinner
- Dankeschön - Thank you
- Bitte - Please
- Entschuldigung - I am sorry; excuse me
- Haus - House
- Hotel - Hotel
- Plenum - Plenary
- Büro - Office
- Kannst Du mir bitte helfen? - Can you help me please?
- check it out for yourself dict.leo.org or www.freetranslation.com or www.linguatec.net
Taxi (all have meters!), Bus, Tram, Subway and S-Bahn
Long distance train (ICE), short distance train (Regionalexpress)
Post Office, letter box
Bank, Savings Bank (Sparkasse), ATM (Geldautomat), Money Exchange

A Policecar in green or blue, Fire Engine, Ambulance
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In case you are arriving earlyer or want to stay a little longer in Berlin, you might want to check the following Websites:
- Accommodation: www.berlin.de/international/accommodation/index.en.php
- Youth Hostels: www.berlinermaueronline.de/berlin-guide/jugendherbergen-berlin.htm
- Bed and Breakfast: www.bed-and-breakfast.de/regional_e/berlin.html
- Tourist Information: www.visitberlin.de/index.en.php
- Berlin Information: www.berlin.de/international/index.en.php
- Public Transportation: www.bvg.de/index.php/en/Bvg/Start
- Lonely Planet: www.lonelyplanet.com/germany/berlin
Please visit Berlin Sightseeing Website
Alexanderplatz
Layer upon layer of Berlin’s urban history is located in Alexanderplatz, interweaving centuries of social, political, and architectural history and repeatedly the subject of public debate and urban design competitions. more »
Berliner Dom
The Berliner Dom (Berlin Cathedral), completed in 1905, is Berlin’s largest and most important Protestant church as well as the sepulchre of the Prussian Hohenzollern dynasty. more »
Brandenburger Tor
The Brandenburg Gate is one of Berlin’s most important monuments – a landmark and symbol all in one with over two hundred years of history. more »
Checkpoint Charlie
Checkpoint Charlie, along with Glienicker Brücke (Glienicker Bridge) was the best known border-crossing of Cold War days more »
East Side Gallery
The East Side Gallery is a 1.3 km-long painted stretch of the former Berlin Wall along the Mühlenstrasse in former East Berlin. It is the largest open-air gallery in the world with over one hundred original mural paintings. more »
Fernsehturm
Everyone is supposed to remember that Berlin’s Fernsehturm (TV Tower) is 365m high and is the tallest building in Berlin. more »
Hackesche Höfe
Berlin’s Hackesche Höfe (Hof means courtyard) – just off S-Bahn Station Hackescher Markt, is a heritage site consisting of eight communicating, restored rear courtyards accessible through Rosenthalerstrasse 40’s main arched entrance. more »
Holocaust Memorial
Berlin’s Holocaust Memorial, located in Mitte on a stretch of the former “death strip”, where the Wall once stood near the Brandenburg Gate, is Berlin’s stunning monument to the Holocaust, dedicated to the Jewish victims of the Nazi genocide of World War II. more »
Jüdisches Museum
A timeless monument to Jewish history and life in Germany, Daniel Libeskind’s Berlin Juedisches Museum is one of the world’s undisputed museums and architectural gems. more »
KaDeWe
Berlin’s most famous trademark department store is KaDeWe (Kaufhaus des Westens) – or department store of the West. It is the legendary, largest department store on the continent. more »
Kaiser Wilhelm Gedächtniskirche
The Gedächtniskirche or Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church is the symbolic centre of West Berlin, an anti- war memorial to peace and reconciliation. Following Allied bombing during WWII, the original, west tower has remained standing as a ruin and is popularly named the “hollow tooth”. more »
Museumsinsel
Berlin’s Museumsinsel (Museum Island) is a unique ensemble of five museums, including the Pergamon Museum - built a the small island in Berlin’s Spree River between 1824 and 1930. more »
Neue Synagoge
The New Synagogue, along with the Jewish Museum and the Holocaust Memorial is one of Berlin’s most significant Jewish landmarks. Built in 1866 as the largest Jewish place of worship in Germany, to seat 3200 people the Neue Synagogue was a symbol of the thriving Jewish community. more »
Olympiastadion
Berlin’s Olympiastadion and Glockenturm (Olympic Stadium and Bell Tower) was built for the 1936 Olympic Games when the 2400m horse-racing track in the Grunewald district was demolished in 1934 to make room for a new National Stadium designed by Werner and Walter March and supervised by Hitler’s Imperial Interior Ministry. more »
Potsdamer Platz
Berlin’s Potsdamer Platz is the most striking example of the urban renewal that turned Berlin into the ‘New Berlin’ in the 1990s although it is not, strictly speaking, a square. more »
Reichstag
Following German reunification on October 3, 1990 the Bundestag (German Federal Parliament) decided, one year later, to reinstate the Reichstag as the seat of Parliament in Berlin, the restored capital of reunited Germany. more »
Rotes Rathaus
Berlin Rotes Rathaus, literally Red Town Hall, is the seat of the Berlin Senate – city government – as opposed to local, district government which is housed in the district Town Halls. more »
Siegessäule
Berlin’s Siegessäule - Victory Column - is another of Berlin’s monuments that has reinvented itself through the ages - from symbol of Prussian military victory in the 19th century to that of Berlin’s thriving gay community and favourite tourist spot today. more »
Tiergarten
Tiergarten in Berlin refers to the parliamentary, government and diplomatic district as well as to Berlin’s largest and most popular inner-city park. more »
