Public life has been shutdown in Germany for months due to the coronavirus second wave. Now a new study shows the majority of people want to see the measures relaxed.
For many foreigners in Germany, a defining cultural breakthrough involves summoning up the courage to bare it all in the sauna. But not all Germans are comfortable showing their bodies either.
Having sex at work seems to be less of a taboo in Germany's workplaces than it once was, with more than one in ten admitting to romantic liaisons in the office. For the under-30s, this number was much higher.
Germans are the most worry-prone nation in Europe, a study released on Tuesday suggested. On the whole, Europeans fret more about unemployment and inflation than they do terrorism or the environment.
German bathrooms are pretty steamy places - not because the ventilation is bad, but because for nearly one in five people, it's their favourite place for sex.
German graduates still hanker after jobs with the country's top car makers, according to the results of a new survey, with the most popular dream employers being Audi, BMW and Volkswagen.
Most Germans want Britain to remain in the European Union (EU), a study suggested on Thursday. Just 22 percent said that the EU would be a better place without its island neighbour.
German children are richer than ever before thanks to generous parents who are doling out ten percent more pocket money than in 2011, a new survey found.
Just 15 percent of Germans would walk out of work if they won a fortune and 68 percent said they would work as a volunteer, a recent survey revealed. Most said they would not expect the money to make them happy though.
Voter confidence in German Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling party waned drastically last week, a new poll said. The slump is another blow for the Christian Democratic Union, darkening its prospects for next year's election.
US citizens just can't get enough of those Germans, according to a new poll published on Wednesday, which showed that Americans think they share more values with Germany than any other non-English-speaking country.
Germans are in greater danger of falling below the poverty line than their closest European neighbours, the German Statistics Office announced Tuesday.
Germany remains a favourite destination for international investors despite the global economic crisis, according to a new survey by professional services firm Ernst & Young.