Stephen Evans, Frugality Rules at German Dinner Parties. BBC, Nov 17, 2012. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20355476
("Germans do not actually earn very much compared to those in other European countries - less than in France and Spain and about two-thirds what a comparable British worker has. And the German wage has barely risen over the past decade. They are frugal because they hold back on pay")
(g) The German word "danke" and "nein danke/ danke, nein" means "thanks" and "No thanks," respectively.
(h) The article said, "In this city of Berlin, for example, women - Trümmerfrauen (rubble women) - scrabbled through the streets, scavenging in the years after the war."
* trümmer (noun masculin): "debris, rubble, wreckage" [NOT rubbish]
* frau (noun feminine); "woman" (The "frauen" is the plural form, corresponding to "woman" in English.)
* scrabble (v; Dutch schrabbelen to scratch):
"2: to scratch, claw, or grope about clumsily or frantically
* * *
3b : to struggle by or as if by scraping or scratching <scrabble for survival>" www.m-w.com