German Grammar Guide
Master German grammar with 25+ essential topics and clear explanations
Cases
German Nominative Case (Nominativ)
The nominative case is used for the subject of a sentence - the person or thing doing the action.
German Accusative Case (Akkusativ)
The accusative case is used for the direct object - the person or thing directly affected by the action.
German Dative Case (Dativ)
The dative case is used for the indirect object - typically the recipient of an action.
German Genitive Case (Genitiv)
The genitive case shows possession or relationship. It's the equivalent of 'of' or apostrophe-s in English.
Articles
German Articles (der, die, das)
German has three genders: masculine (der), feminine (die), and neuter (das). Learning the article with each noun is essential.
German Possessive Articles (mein, dein, sein...)
German possessive articles (mein, dein, sein, ihr, unser, euer, ihr) follow the same endings as 'ein'.
Word Order
German Word Order Basics
German word order follows specific rules. The verb is always in second position in main clauses, and time-manner-place (TMP) order applies to adverbs.
German Subordinate Clauses (Nebensätze)
In German subordinate clauses, the conjugated verb moves to the end. These are introduced by conjunctions like weil, dass, wenn, ob.
Tenses
German Present Tense (Präsens)
The present tense in German is used for current actions, habits, and future events. Regular verbs follow predictable patterns.
German Perfect Tense (Perfekt)
The perfect tense is the most common past tense in spoken German. It uses haben or sein + past participle.
German Simple Past Tense (Präteritum)
The Präteritum is used primarily in written German and for modal verbs/haben/sein in spoken German.
Verbs
German Modal Verbs (können, müssen, wollen...)
Modal verbs express ability, necessity, permission, or desire. They're used with an infinitive at the end of the sentence.
German Reflexive Verbs
Reflexive verbs use reflexive pronouns (sich) when the action reflects back on the subject.
German Imperative (Commands)
The imperative is used for commands, requests, and instructions. It has different forms for du, ihr, and Sie.
German Passive Voice (Passiv)
The passive voice in German is formed with werden + past participle. It emphasizes the action rather than who performs it.
German Separable Verbs (Trennbare Verben)
Separable verbs have prefixes that split off and go to the end of the sentence in main clauses.
Syntax
German Negation (nicht, kein)
German uses 'nicht' to negate verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. 'Kein' negates nouns and replaces 'ein/eine'.
German Relative Clauses
Relative clauses provide additional information about a noun. They use relative pronouns that match the gender of the noun they refer to.
German Question Formation
German questions are formed by inverting subject and verb, or by using question words (W-Fragen).
Adjectives
Prepositions
German Accusative Prepositions
These prepositions always require the accusative case: durch, für, gegen, ohne, um (remember: DOGFU).
German Dative Prepositions
These prepositions always require the dative case: aus, bei, mit, nach, seit, von, zu, gegenüber.
German Two-Way Prepositions (Wechselpräpositionen)
These prepositions take accusative for movement/direction and dative for location/position: an, auf, hinter, in, neben, über, unter, vor, zwischen.
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