German
German
German
In total, the German alphabet has 30 letters :26 Latin letters and 4 extra ones
(ä ,ö ,ü, ß)
Aa Bb C c Dd Ee
Ff Gg H h II J j
K k Ll Mm Nn O o
Pp Qq Rr S s Tt
Uu Vv W w Xx Yy
Zz Ää Ö ö Üü ß ß
Word stress :
1) In general the majority of German words have the stress on the first
syllable :
c. Stress-flexible prefixes ( where the stress falls changes the word meaning):
über-, um-,unter-,etc.
3) Loanwords:
Words borrowed from other languages generally keep their original stress :
Ingenieur – Theater
Words with roots in Latin or French have the stress on the last or second last
syllable: -ant, -anz, -enz, -ion,-ismus , - ist , -ment, -tät , -ieren
Universität – studieren
4) Compound words :
The stress of the first words in the compound is the stress of the whole
compound word
Hausaufgabe – Klassenzimmer
Syllables:
There are five regular vowels and three vowels with umlaut in German: a , e
, I , o , u and ä ,ö ,ü, a , o , u and ä ,ö ,ü are pronounced differently .
A = Vater – Mann
Ä = Väter - Männer
O= Sohn – Dorf
Ö = Söhne – Dörfer
U = Kuh – Mutter
Ü = kühe – Mütter
2. Consonants + Vowel :
-it’s followed by only one consonant ,e.g “a” in “Vater” is long , and “a” in
“Mann” is short
-it’s duplicated, such as “aa” in “Maat”, “ee” in “See” and “oo” in “Boot” ; the
vowel “I” never duplicates. The long sound of “I” appears usually as”ie” , like in
“sieben” . The vowels “ u/ä/ö/ü” never duplicate.
F = fest – Fehler
H = Hund – Huhn
J = Jacke – Jahr
K = Kommen – Kohl
L = Licht – Lied
M = Mann – Maat
N = Neffe – Nacken
P = packen – Paar
T = Tante – Tag
Z = Zoll – Zoo
Au = Haus – Maus
2) Double consonants :
When a consonant is doubled, its sound doesn’t change. For the consonant “k” ,
there is no “kk” , but there is “ck”
Ff= Neffe
Ll = Ball
Nn = nennen
Ss = Tasse
Ck = Zucker
Mm = Nummer
Pp = Puppe
Tt = Gatte
3) grouped consonants:
b) ph:
Photo – phase
C) tz, ts:
d) chs , x:
4. Special pronunciations :
1) ch:
2) b , d , g :
3) s , ß :
sagen – See
b) when it follows a vowel or consonant :
das – Dienst
c) ß :
heiß – Füße
4 ) st , sp :
Stadt – Sport
Fenster – knospe
5) Pf , kn :
6) Ng :
lang – übung
7) Qu :
Quelle – Qual
8) W , v :
a) “w” is pronounced with the upper front teech gently pressing the lower
lip, like the English “v” :
wann – Wetter
vier – Motiv
c) Unless it’s the final sound of a loanword , “v” is voiced like the normal
English “ v” :
Vase – Klavier
9) Ig :
a) At the end of words:
Richtig – Honig
b) Before a vowel :
richtige – wenige
10 ) sch , tsch :
11 ) y:
Typ – Symbol
York – Yoga
12) r :
Radio – Frau
Herren – Kurz
Ohr – Tier
Basics
Part I:
• “der” -masculine
• “die” - feminine
• “das” - neuter
It's very important to memorize the nouns together with their genders . The
gender of the noun is not the bioligical gender of the object .Anything that can
be named , such as lifeless objects or ideas , has a gender .
For example:
German verbs are conjugated in the tenses , persons, numbers and moods. Here
is how we conjugate the verb “sein(be)” in the singulars/
Subject sein
ich/i bin/am
du/you bist/are
er/sie/es/he/she/it Ist/is
Extended reading:
1. Capitalization of nouns:
In written German , the first letter of all nouns must be capitalized , which
helps the readers quickly differentiate which word is a noun
The grammatical case of a noun reflects the function it plays in a sentence . The
case system in the German language has four categories , which are :
• Nominative
• Accusative
• Genitive
• Dative
In German , nouns in the nominative case are either the subject of a sentence or
the nouns after the “ sein” verb
Example:
Part I:
1.simple present tense:
2. Verb conjugations :
The infinitive form of most German verbs ends with –en , some with –n
(example Klettern = climb (mountain)). The stem of the verb is the
infinitive form minus the “-en” ending.
Most verbs are conjugated by adding different endings to the verb stem:
verb stem + ending
Exp:
When an article proceeds a noun , the inflection of the article can reflect
the noun’s grammatical case .
Case m f n
nominative Ein Apfel /an Eine Tomate/a Ein Ei / an egg
apple tomato
accusative Einen Apfel / an Eine Tomate/ a Ein Ei / an egg
apple tomato
With definite articles :
Case m f n
nominative Der Apfel/ the Die Tomate/the Das Ei/ the egg
apple tomato
accusative Den Apfel/the Die Tomate/ the Das Ei/ the egg
apple tomato
Extended reading:
For example:
If you really want to emphasize that the action is happening right now ,
you can add the adverb “jetzt (now)” or “gerade (just now)” in the
sentence to indicate the ongoing status .
2. Gern - “enjoy,gladly”:
The adverb “gern” means “enjoy , gladly “ you might also hear native
speakers say “gerne” , which is exactly the same meaning . “Gern” can be
placed right after the verb
3. No articles:
Plural
(1) Nouns ending with –nis end with –nisse in the plurals :
(2) Feminine nouns ending with –in end with –innen in the plurals:
Sein :
I -e Ich trinke
you -st Du trinkst
he/she/it -t Er/sie/es trinkt
we -en Wir trinken
you -t Ihr trinkt
they -en sie trinken
YOU -en Sie trinken
Greetings
1. “Guten Tag!”:
Here are the easiest ways to greet people at different times of the day :
You might have noticed that “gut” in guten Abend and gute Nacht are
not exactly the same. As a matter fact , all of these are shortened forms
of the complete versions below:
- (ich wünsche Ihnen einen) guten Morgen! = (I wish you a) good
morning!
- (ich wünsche Ihnen einen) guten Tag! = (I wish you a) good day!
- (ich wünsche Ihnen einen) guten Abend! = (I wish you a) good
evening!
- (ich wünsche Ihnen einen) gute Nacht! = (I wish you a) good night!
2. Self-introductions:
Part I:
Part II:
Addirmative negative
Ich kaufe einen Apfel / Ich kaufe keinen
I'm buying one apple Apfel/ I'm not buying
one apple
Ich trinke Kaffee / I Ich trinke keinen
drink coffee Kaffee/ I don’t drink
coffee
Like the indefinite articles , " kein " is also inflected in the genders , cases and
the numbers . In this unit , we are learning how to use " kein " along with nouns
of different genders and plural forms in the nominative and accusative cases .
When the noun is in the nominative case and in the accusative case , the
indefinite pronoun " kein " and the noun are combined as follows :
( N = Nominative , A = Accusative )
Sg./pl. N A
Masculine Sg. Kein Apfel Keinen Apfel
Pl. Keine Äpfel Keine Äpfel
Feminine Sg. Keine Orange Keine Orange
Pl. Keine Orangen Keine Orangen
Neuter Sg. Kein Kind Kein Kind
1. Yes-No questions:
To form a yes-no question , the verb is placed at the beginning of the sentence
with the rest of the sentence left unchanged
Extended reading:
1. Sentence structures:
The focus of a sentence in German Is the verb. The verb is always the second
component of a sentence after the subject. In German , a sentence is divided
into several fields (“der Feld”) , and different components of the sentence are
grouped strictly into these fields.
Vorfeld (front Linke Klammer Mittelfeld ( Rechte Klammer
field) (left bracket) middle field) (right bracket)
ich/i Bin /am Eine Tochter / a
daughter
Ich/i kaufe/buy Einen Apfel / an
apple
Ich /i habe/have Die Gemacht /done
Hausaufgabe/the
homework
2. The use of “ kein” Vs. “nicht”:
A summary table:
Objects
Ich /i habe/have
du/you Hast /have
er/sie/es/he/she/it hat/has
Wir/you(pl.) haben/have
Ihr /you (pl.) Habt/ have
sie /they Haben/ have
Sie /YOU haben/have
2. Ich habe Hunger/Durst :
The most common way to say “i’m hungry/thirsty” is “ich habe Hunger /Durst”
it literally means “ I have hunger/thirst” , which sounds kind of serious in
english but very casual and normal in German .
You can also say “ich bin hungrig/durstig” , which sounds slightly more serious
than “ich habe Hunger/durst” though.
Question 2
1. Das ist/sind....
“Das” is a demonstrative pronoun that works like “ this, that , these , those” .
Its specific reference depends on the context and situation. We use “ist” or
“sind” after “das” depending on the quantity of the subject complement
Non-polar questions in German begin with these question words : Wer ( who) ,
was (what), wann (when), wo (where) , warum ( why) and wie (how).
W- questions Answer
Was ist das?/ what is that? Das ist eine Pizza / that is a pizza
Wer trinkt Tee?/ who drinks tea? Anna trinkt Tee / Anna drinks tea
As you can see, the verb is always the second component of the question
“Was( what)” can used to interrogate thenouns are in the nominative case oe
the accusative case .
The question word “wer” interrogates the person in the nominative case only
Many verbs that are frequently used in day-to-day life are the irregular verbs .
Some verbs don’t only change their endings according to the personal pronouns ,
but they also change their vowels.
ich/i esse/eat
du/you isst/eat
er/sie/es/he/she/it Isst /eats
wir/we essen/eat
Ihr /you (pl.) esst/eat
sie /they essen/eat
Sie/YOU Essen/eat
As you can see , if the vowel changes , it usually happens to the second singular,
“du” , and the third sungular personal pronoun “es/sie/es”
NUMBERS 1
1. One:
The number “one” is “eins” do not confuse it with indefinite articles “ein, eine,
ein”
null 0
eins 1
zwei 2
drei 3
vier 4
fünf 5
sechs 6
sieben 7
acht 8
neun 9
zehn 10
3. Basic math:
Times
1. Time expressions:
Expression example
On the dot Es ist XX Uhr Es ist drei Uhr / it’s
3am (3:00)
Es ist vierzehn Uhr/ it’s
2 pm (14:00)
Not on the dot Es ist XX Uhr AA Es ist acht Uhr dreißig /
it’s 8:30 am (8:30)
Es ist fünfzehn / it’s
3:17 pm(15:17)
NOTE: the 24-hour format is used in Germany instead of the “12-hour
+am/pm” format in the U.S
2. 11 to 19:
eins 1 elf 11
zwei 2 zwölf 12
drei 3 dreizehn 13
vier 4 vierzehn 14
fünf 5 fünfzehn 15
sechs 6 sechzehn 16
sieben 7 siebzehn 17
acht 8 achtzehn 18
neun 9 neunzehn 19
3. Multiples of 10:
Numbers like “20” and “70” ending with”-ty”, just add “-zig”
zwei 2 zwanzig 20
drei 3 dreißig 30
vier 4 vierzig 40
fünf 5 fünfzig 50
sechs 6 sechzig 60
sieben 7 siebzig 70
acht 8 achtzig 80
neun 9 neunzig 90
Note / 30 is dreißig, not –zig
4. 21 –99:
einundzwanzig 21
achtunddreißig 38
siebenundvierzig 47
zweiundvierzigtausend 42000
In numbers 21, 31, 41, ...91, it’s “einund+zwanzig~neunzig” not
“einsund+zwanzig~neunzig”
HOUSEHOLD
1. “Es gibt...” :
2. Prepositions:
“In” and “ auf” are two very commonly used two-way prepositions.
When the preposition is used to indicate location , the noun or pronoun
after the preposition is in the dative case.
An easy trick to differentiate which case to use is to ask if it’s about “wo
(where)” or “wohin (where to)”
For example:
For examples:
-Ja, aber der Garten is klein ( yes, but the garden is small)
ACTIVITIES
To determine which case to use after the preposition , you can always ask
yourself the question “where or where to”
Statement: Du kochst in der Küche ( you cook in the kitchen)
If the question starts with “where” , use dative case after the preposition:
2. Common verbs:
kochen cook
duschen shower
singen sing
hören hear
machen make
schreiben write
PLACES
Every profession has a masculine form and a feminine form. The feminine
form of most professions is the masculine form plus “-in” at the end. For
some professions, the feminine form also gets an umlaut over the vowel:
a/o/u/au becomes ä/ö/ü/aü
For example:
QUANTITY
1. wie viel:
To ask for the quantity of something , we can use “wie viel” or “ wie
viele” dpending on if the object is countable or not :
explanation examples
Wie viele + countable objects Wie viele Bücher hat das
Kind?/how many books does the
child have?
Das kind that sechs Bücher/the
child has 6 books
Wie viel + uncountable object Wie viel Milch trinkst du?/ how
much milk do you drink?
Ich trinke ein Glas Milch/ I drink a
glass of milk
2. Measure word:
Note that the gendre of the article in this structure is the same with that
of the measure word ,not the noun . there is also no preposition between
the measure word and noun.
So “ a glass of milk” is “ein Glas Milch”. The gender of the article “ein”
here is neutral, same with the gender of “Glas (glass)” , not feminine like
“Milch (milk)” (r= der, e= die, s=das)
COLORS
1. welch-:
To ask for “ which one” in German we must pay attention to the gender,
the case and the number of the noun that follows
For example:
The use of ajectives after the sein-verbs is very simple , but the use of
adjectives before nouns, like a simple expression for “ a red flower” in
German , requires the knowledge of inflecting the adjective according to
the gender , the case and the quantity of the noun , which is
unnecessarily complicated at this point of learning.
3. Color as nouns:
For many adjectives and verbs in German, capitilizing the first letter will
give you the noun form . A great example is the color nouns:
adjective noun
rot/red Rot/red
schwarz/black Schwarz black
4.”am” = “an” + “dem”
5. more colors:
Rot red
Grün green
Gelb yellow
Blau blue
Rosa pink
weiß whute
Schwarz black
Grau gray
ANIMALS
1. “was für”
The question words “was für” are similar to “what kind/type of” . It can
be placed before nouns to ask for more details related to the subject
Example:
- was für ein Auto hast du? ( what kind of car do you have?)
- was für ein Tier ist das? (what kind of animal is that?)
2. Adverbs:
Words that modify actions are called adverbs. In German , adverbs have
the same form as the adjectives . They can be placed directly after the
verbs .
For example:
- Der Löwe läuft schnell ( the lion runs fast)
3. Animal nouns :
CLOTHES
1. Possessive pronouns:
Possessive pronouns are words , like “ my” , “your” and “his” , that
indicate the possession of the objects. Possessive pronouns in German
change according to the gender, the quantity and the case of the object .
m f n
possessive Mein Mantel/my Meine Jacke/ Mein Kleid/ my
coat mu jacket dress
plurals Meine Meine Jacken/ Meine Kleider
Mäntel/my mu jackets /my dresses
coats
(2) All possessive pronouns (preceding singular masculine nouns)
mein my
dein your
sein his/its
ihr her
unser our
euer Your (pl.)
ihr their
Ihr YOUR
Note: when “euer” precedes a feminine noun or plurals , it is “eure” not
“euere”
2. Wessen ( whose):
SHOPPING
1. Möchten:
the use of möchten as an indicative verb that expresses the wish to have
something:
For example:
nominative accusative
Ich mich
du dich
er ihn
sie sie
es es
wir uns
ihr euch
sie sie
Sie Sie
2. The conjugation of “sehen ( see)” and “Mögen (like)” :
The question word” wen” interrogates the person in the accusative case
only
DAILY LIFE
Part I:
1. “Mahlzeit (mealtime)!:
The words for lunch and dinner are fairly straightforward : Mittagessen
(=Mittag/noon + Essen/food) and Abendessen (= Abend/evening +
Essen/food)
to say “have lunch/dinner” , you need the fixed phrase “zu Mittag/Abend
essen”
The word for breakfast is “Frühstück”, and it has its own verb form
“Frühstücken (have breakfast)”
Examples:
The question to ask for time is “wann (when)” . be aware that it cannot
be used in conditional sentences like in english , such as “ i will call you
when you get home” . The word “ wann” can only be used to interrogate
the time of an action/event .
For example:
1. Am + time :
(1) to say ”in the afternoon” or “at the weekend”, we just need the
preposition “am (an+dem)”
2 . Von...bis..:
To say “from Time A to Time B” just use “von..bis..” with any time
nouns
For example:
WEEK
1. “Am Montag”:
1. Jahreszeiten (seasons):
Jahreszeit Im...
Frühling (spring) Im frühling
Sommer (summer) Im Sommer
Herbst (fall) Im Herbst
Winter (winter) Im Winter
2. Monate (months):
All month nouns in German are masculine “in January /.../ December” in
German is therefore “ im/in dem..”:
POSITION
1. prepositions:
Dative prepositions:
2. Location adverbs:
-Der Park ist rechts von dem café (the park is to the right of the café)
-Das Krankenhaus ist links von der Schule ( the hospital is to the left of
the school)
Family
1. family members:
1. Verb +er/erin:
To ask the question what one does for a living , we say “von Beruf”
( by trade)” . The word “der Beruf” means profession , career.
“Von” is a preposition that introduces sources , similar to “of ,
from , by”
-was ist Anna von Beruf? ( what does Anna do for a living?)
- was ist sein Vter von Beruf?( what does his father do for a
living?)
FREQUENCY
1. Frequency adverbs:
DE EN Frequency stars
nie never *
manchmal sometimes **
oft often ***
immer always *****
2 . Every day/week/year/
here are the words for “ daily, weekly , monthly and yearly”:
COMPARATIVE
1. comparative adjectives:
• For most words , just attach “-er” at the end of the word
(2) in some cases , the vowels are umlauted: a/o/u/au => ä/ö/ü/äu
(3) For words that end with “-e”, attach “-r” only
(4) For words ending with –el" , “-er” and “-en”, remove “e” and
attach “-er” at the end
(5) Only a few adjectives do not follow the rules above and require
separate memorieation
For example:
2. Comarative sentences:
• Der Bär ist größer als der Hase ( the bear is bigger than the
rabbit)
• Thomas ist jünger als Peter ( Thomas is younger than Peter)
3. Welch- :
For example:
NATURE
See is actually a noun since the capital “S” tell you that . It has two
genders , and each represents a different object:
3. Vocabulary of “Nature”:
BODY
Part I:
1. Superlatives:
(1) Use preposition “am” first and the adjective plus the ending
“-sten”
(2) For some words , their vowels are umlauted : a/o/u/au =>
ä/ö/ü/äu
(3) For words ending with –s, -t, -d, -ß, -z, the ending to attach
is “-esten”
For example:
(1) To say “A of B” , there are two ways: one involves the use of
the genitive case, and one involves the preposition “von”. The use of
“von” to indicate possession is equivalent to the preposition “of” in
english
Foe example:
Der Kopf von dem Löwen ist The head of the lion is round
rund
(2) We can also add the letter “s” after the name of a person to
refer to the owner of something. If the nale ends with “s,ß, x” , we
use an apostrophe or the “von” - form
Format DE En
B von A Die Blumen von The flowers of
Frankreich France
B A+s Die Autos Cars of Germany
Deutschlands
A+er B Das Berliner The Berlin breadrolls
Brötchen
Part II:
For example:
case DE EN
nominative Man riecht mit der One smells with the
Nase nose
Darf man hier Can one smoke
rauchen? here?
accusative Die Nachricht freut The news pleases one
einen
Dative Es tut einem weh, It hurts one to see
das zu sehen that
2. Womit:
Womit sieht man?/with what Man sieht mit den Augen/ one
does one see? sees with the eyes
Womit riecht man?/ with what Man riecht mit der Nase/one
does one smell? smells with the nose
Likewise , other question words with “wo +preposition” , such as “
wodurch”, “wobei” , “worauf” , etc, follow the same principle. They
are derived from “durch was”, “bei was” and ”auf was”, etc
3. Vocabulary of “Body:
Masculine nouns that represent male living beings and end”-e” are
always weak.
For examples:
POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS(ACCUSATIVE)
1. “Sie” vs.”du”:
(3) The verbs that follow “Sie” are conjugated the same as following
“wir/sie”. So “wir” and “Sie” share the same conjugation rule
(4) The possessive pronoun of “Sie” is “Ihré , with the letter always
capitalized
IMPERATIVE
1. imperative:
a)Regular verbs and verbs taking an umlaut in the second and third
person conjugation:
-Foe a lot of verbs , it(s ok to just keep the bare verb stem. But, do
not cut off “-e” from a verb stem that ends in any one of “-t”, “-
d” , “-ig” , “-ffn” or “-chn”!
- what are verbs that take an umlaut in the second and third
person conjugation form?
These are irregular verbs with “a”/ “au” in the stem that when
conjugating for “du/er/sie/es” , their “a”/”au” turn into “ä/äu”
Foe example:
Verbs with ablaut are verbs whose vowel sound change when in the
second and third person conjugation form:
INDEFINITE PRONOUNS
(1) When they are used as adjectives , their ending varies the
same way the plural definite article does:
- Einige +noun plural = some/a few...
- Wenige + noun plural = few/a very few....
- Viele + noun plural = many /a lot of...
For example:
Also , respectively , the former takes a plural verb form and the
latter a singular one.
MODAL VERBS1
For example:
NOTE: “Mögen” ( to like) is also a modal verb , but it usually stands alone
as a finite verb to indicate preference and doesn’t go with another
infinitive
When the modal verbs partner up with infinitives , modal verbs take the
second position, the “linke Klammer” (left bracket) , and infinitives
occupy the “ rechte Klammer” (right bracket)
Once those two positions are secured , we finish the sentence building by
putting the subject in the “ Vorfeld” (front field) and shoving other
sentence components , for example , the object of the infinitive , in the
“Mittelfeld” (middle field)
For example:
For example:
Swap the modal verb and the subject, keep the rest of the sentence
components the way they are and throw in a question mark at the end.
For example:
b) Constructing wh-questions:
Go through the procedure for a yes-no question , and put the question
word in the very front :
RESTAURANT
Usage Example
Food combination - Schweinebraten mit Sauerkraut
/Roast pork with sauerkraut
- Ich möchte ein Eis mit Obst/ I
want /would like an ice cream
with fruit
Method - Sie können mit Kreditkarte
bezahlen/you can pay by credit
card
- Sie können mit Bargeld bezahlen
/you can pay in cash
3. Useful phrases for dining out :
When dining at a restaurant , it’s common for both the customer and the
waitor to use “Sie” toward each other:
SPORT
There is a whole lot of German verbs with “a” or “au” that need to have the
extra two dots on top when they conjugate for “du” and “er/sie/es”. The two
verbs we’re handling belong to that category.
Noun Adverb
Morgen Morgens = am Morgen (in the
morning) (usually before 10 a.m)
Vormittag Vormittags = am Vormittag (in
the morning) (usually between 10
a.m to noon)
Mittag Mittags = am Mittag (at noon)
Nachmittag Nachmittags = am Nachmittag (in
the afternoon)
Abend Abends = am Abend (in the
evening)
Nacht Nachts = in der Nacht ( at night)
SPARE TIME
1. I like...
DE En
Ich mache gern XX I like doing...
XX gefällt mir sehr i like XX very much (XX is the
subject)
XX ist mein Lieblings- XX is my favorite .. ( sport , music
etc)
2. How long?
We use “wie lange” to ask about the duration of something with either
the simple present tense or the present perfect tense .
- Wie lange lernen Sie schon Deutsch?( how long have YOU been
learning German?)
- Ich lerne Deutsch seit zwei Monaten (I've been learning German for
two months)
3. Scheduling to meet:
For example:
Example Note
Vor dem Museum /in front of the The preposition “vor” requires the
museum dative. (“dem” is the dative form
of “das”)
Ich gebe dem Kind ein Bonbon /i The verb “geben” (to give) has an
give the kid a candy indirect and a direct object here:
- “A candy” is the direct object
that the verb directly acts upon ,
hence the accusative for it
- “the kid” is the indirect object ,
the receiver of the candy, hence
the dative “dem Kind”
Ich danke Ihnen /i thank YOU The verb “ dranken”(to thank)
takes objects in the dative (“ihnen”
is the dative form of “Sie”)
2. Dative definite articles :
Here's the comparison between the nominative and the dative definite
articles with nouns:
3. Preposition + Dative:
The latter usually takes nouns in the dative when indicating a static
position/location , and takes the accusative when implying a movement .
For example:
Dative: -Ich sitze im café (im= in dem) ( I'm sitting in the coffee shop)
Accusative: - Ich gehe in die Stadt ( I’m heading to the city)
TRAVEL 1
1. Means of transportation:
“The USA” has the definite article as a part of the country name . In German,
there’s something similar. Some city or country names carry a definite article in
them. Therefore , when we say we’re going to a specific city or country in
German, we need to choose which preposition to use (“nach” or “in”) according
to whether the city /country name carries a definite article or not
For example:
For example:
“Wohin” means “where to” , and is employed to ask about the direction/aim of
a movement. It can be comprehended as the motionless question word “wo” plus
the adverb “hin” that implies the direction of the movement
For example:
-Wohin gehst du? ( where are you going?)
“Woher” means “from where” and it comprises “wo” and the adverb “her” that
indicates the direction that the movement comes from
For example:
Extended reading:
1. Names of countries:
Deutschland Germany
Frankreich French
Österreich Austria
Spanien Spain
Italien Italy
Die USA The USA
Die Schweiz Switzerland
2. Names of cities and state:
Berlin Berlin
Köln Cologne
München Munich
Hamburg Hamburg
Frankfurt Frankfurt
Bayern Bavaria (state)
Wien Vienna
London London
Paris Paris
DIRECTION
1. Cardinal points:
(1) This is how German speakers say the cardinal direction of something :
-Berlin liegt im Norden Deutschlands (Berlin is in Northern Germany )
Scene DE EN
Gibt es XX in der Nähe? Is there XX nearbly?
Asking for directions Könnten Sie mir sagen, Could you tell me the
wie ich zu XX komme? way to XX?
Wo ist XX? Where is XX?
Giving directions Gehen Sie geradeaus Go straight on
Biegen Sie nach links Turn left/right
/rechts
Gehen Sie die straße Go along the street
entlang
A ist gegenüber von B A is opposite B
A ist neben B A is next to B
3. Indicating possession:
-noun + place –s
- place –er + noun
VERBS +DATIVE
Part I:
Certain transitive verbs must have an indirect object and a direct one in order
to make full sense.
List of verbs :
When the plural noun is in the dative , it needs to have a dative article as well
as an extra “-n” at the end, as seen in “den Häusern”. However , if the plural
ends in “-n” or “-s” , it doesn’t need that extra ending “-n”
Verbs with ablaut are verbs whose vowel sound change when in the second and
third person conjugation form
The comparison between the nominative and the dative indefinite articles with
nouns : (there’s no plural indefinite article in German)
When a plural noun is in the dative , it needs to have a dative article as well as
and “Meinen Kindern”. However , if the plural ends in “-n” or ”-s” , it doesn’t
need that extra ending “-n”
“Etwas” means “some , a little” and modifies uncountable nouns. It doesn’t need
to change its appearance at any times
For example:
1. Verb categories :
In German , verbs are the key to determining the object’s number and case
For example:
example Note
Anna speilt Tennis /Anna plays tennis The verb “ spielen” (to p^lay) requires
an accusative object
Ich danke Ihnen / I thank you The verb “ danken” ( to thank)
requires a dative object ( “ihnen” is
the dative form of “Sie”)
b) Some transitive verbs need to have two objects , an indirect one and a
direct one
As mentioned before, the indirect object is dative and the direct object is
accusative. In most cases, the dative precedes the accusative ,but exceptions do
exist
For example:
Example Note
Ich gebe dem Kind ein Bonbon /i give The verb ” geben” (to give) demands
a kid a candy an indirect object (dative) and a
direct object (accusative)
Thomas schenkt einem Freund eine The verb “ schenken” (to give as a
Torte / Thomas gives a (male) friend gift) demands an indirect object
a cake as a gift (dative) and a direct object
(accusative)
(2) intransitive verbs:
Intransitive verbs can’t take a direct object , they must go hand in hand with a
preposition
For example:
Example Note
Ich warte auf dich / I’m waiting for The verb “ warten” (to wait) is
you /i’ll wait for you intransitive and takes the preposition
“auf” which requires the accusative to
follow
- Some of them need only a direct object to make sense. The direct object
can be accusative or dative depending on the grammatical requirement of
the verb
- Some of them need an indirect and a direct object to make the meaning
of the sentence complete. The indirect object must be dative and the
direct object accusative .
When you come upon a verb in the former division that demands a dative direct
object, and the object is a personal pronoun , you’ll need the following list that
sets out all the personal pronouns in the nominative , accusative and dative case
- The dative form of “sie” (she) looks identical to the nominative form of
“ihr” (you pl.)
But we can tell which one it is from the verb conjugation in a sentence
- The dative form of “er” and “es” are both “ihm”. Since “er” and “es”
also share the same verb conjugation form, we can only identify what
“ihm” refers to from the context
- The dative form of “Sie” is “Ihnen” , with the initial always capitalized
2. Verbs and verb phrases that demand a dative object :
for example:
“helfen” is a verb with ablaut , meaning , its second and third person singular
conjugation each has a vowel sound shift
DE EN
Ich helfe i help
Du hilfst You help
Er/sie/es hilft He/she/it helps
Wir helfen We help
Ihr helft You help
sie helfen They help
Sie helfen YOU help
FUTURE I
Part I:
“werden” (will) is the must-have auxiliary verb in this formula and it must
conjugate to agree with the sentence subject
Examples:
The formation of negation in the future tense is very similar to that of modal
verbs:
(1) Negating with “nicht”
a) Negating the entire statement : “nicht” before the infinitive
b) Negation a certain component in the sentence : “nicht” before the
component
for example:
For example:
morgen tomorrow
übermorgen the day after tomorrow
Nächstes Jahr Next year
Nächste Woche Next week
3. Irregular verb “Nehmen” (to take):
Forming questions in the future tense is also quite the same as with modal verbs:
Reverse the sentence subject and “ werden” , keep the rest of the sentence
uncharged , and put a question mark at the end
- switch the position of the sentence subject and “werden” , and keep the rest
of the sentence uncharged
Statement Question
ich werde die Tür Öffnen /i will open Wirst du die Tür Öffnen ?/ will you
the door open the door?
Er wird nach Berlin fahren /he will go Wohin wird er fahren?/ where will he
to Berlin go?
2. verbs with prepositions :
- ich warte auf dich ( i’m waiting for you /i’ll wait for you )
- Bitte antworten Sie auf die Frage ( please answer the question!)
- Er redet mit seinem Chef ( he’s talking with his boss)
- Wirst du bei mir bleiben? ( will you stay with me?)
WEATHER
Part I:
Regen rain
Schnee snow
Nebel fog
Blitz lightning
Donner thunder
3. weather verbs :
regnen To rain
schneien To snow
scheinen to shine
wehen To blow (wind)
4. weather adjectives :
Sonnig sunny
Wolkig cloudy
Kühl cool
heiß hot
trocken dry
feucht humid
5.Irregular verb “ fallen” (to fall) :
“Fallen” is one of those verbs that have umlaut on top of its second and third
person singular conjugation
1. Two-Digit numbers :
For example :
MODAL VERBS 2
two ways to use German modal verbs: independently or with another verb
infinitive
it means treating a modal verb as a finite verb ,example, the modal verb takes
the position of the main verb in a sentence. No other verbs are present except
the modal verb. Consequently , the modal verb must conjugate to the
corresponding form for the sentence subject. Meanwhile , the noun after the
modal verb must be in the accusative case .
For example:
When modal verbs partner up with infinitives , modal verbs take the second
position , the “linke Klammer “ (left bracket) , and infinitives occupy the
“rechte Klammer” ( right bracket)
Once those two positions are secured , we finish the sentence building by putting
the subject in the “ Vorfeld” (front field ) and shoving other sentence
components , for example, the object of the infinitive , in the “Mittelfeld”
(middle field)
for example:
for example :
Swap the modal verb and the subject , keep the rest to the sentence
components the way they are and throw in a question mark at the end.
For example:
-constructing wh-questions:
Go through the procedure for a yes-no question, and put the question word in
the very front
Statement Question
Ich darf fotografieren/i can take Darf ich fotografieren ?/ can I take
photos photos?
Ich soll ihm helfen /i should help him Wem sollst du helfen?/whom should
you help?
HEALTH
1. Sickness :
Some body parts can make a compound noun with “Schmerz” (pain). Similarly
in english, we have “headache”, “toothache” etc. Here is how we say “to have
pain in a specific body part” in German : "Schmerz” takes the plural form in
this expression)
Magenschmerzen stomachache
Ich habe Magenschmerzen i have a stomachache
Halsschmerzen Sore throat
Mein Kind hat Halsschmerzen My child has a sore throat
Kopfschmerzen headache
Haben Sie Kopfschmerzen Do you have a headache?
Bauchschmerzen Belly pain
Alle Kinder hier haben All the kids here have belly pain
Bauchschmerzen
Zahnschmerzen toothache
Ich kann nicht essen. Ich habe i can’t eat. i have a toothache
Zahnschmerzen
(2) Body part +tut mir weh :
Not all body parts can build compound nouns with “Schmerz”
Generally , the doctor and the patient use “Sue” toward each other
CONJUNCTIONS
DE EN Example
und and Anna und
SC Thomas haben ein
Kind /Anna and
Thomas have a
child
aber but - Sie kann
schwimmen, aber
ich kann nicht
schwimmen /she
can swim, but i
can’t swim
- Aber ich kann
tanzen / but i can
dance
oder or Trinken Sie Tee
oder Kaffee? /do
you drink tea or
coffee?
Nicht /kein.., Not..but.. Wir fahren nicht
CC sondern.. nach Italien,
sondern nach
Spanien /we’re
not going/ driving
to Italy , but to
Spain
Weder.. Neither...nor.. Ich kann weder
Noch... lesen noch
schreiben /i can
neither read nor
write
Entweder.. Either...or.. Wir fahren
Oder... entweder nach
Deutschland oder
nach
Frankreich/we’re
going/driving to
either Germany
or France
Sowohl..als auch... Both..and../as well Sie ist sowohl
as Tänzerin als auch
Malerin/ she is
both a dancer
and a painter/
she is a dancer as
well as a painter
OPINION
1. Subordinate clauses :
A subordinate clause can’t function alone. It needs a main clause to make full
sense.
PRESENT PERFECT
1. Present perfect :
• Past events
• Past events that still have some kind of connection to the current
situation
The name “ present perfect” can be confusing for english speakers because in
day-to-day speech , German speakers use the present perfect so much more
often than the past tense to talk about things that happened in the past .
The past tense is more prevalent in written German such as news reports and
letters
In the present perfect, we have two quxiliary verbs: we use either “haben” or
“sein”
- “Haben” or “sein”?:
For example:
Verb Example
Intransitive verbs that imply Ihr seid gelaufen /you (plural)ran/
movement from one point to another you (plural) have run
Intransitive verbs that imply changes Die Kinder sind schnell eingeschlafen
/the kids quickly fell asleep/the kids
have quickly fallen asleep
“sein” and “bleiben” Er ist hier gewesen/ he was here/ he
has been here
Du bist bei mir geblieben / you stayed
with me/you have stayed with me
2. Past participles :
Here is how to form the present perfect tense with modal verbs:
Examples:
SEPARABLE VERBS
1. Separable verbs:
The verb takes the second position (example, “linke Klammer”, the left bracket
in “Satzklammer”) and the prefix goes to “rechte Klammer”, the right bracket:
(4) in the present perfect and past perfect tense (also known as “the
pluperfect”) , a past participle of a separable verb has”-ge-” between the prefix
and the verb
Examples:
REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS
1. reflexive pronouns :
There's a type of Geramn verbs called “reflexive verbs” that must be used with
reflexive pronouns at all times. We can interpret it as the subject performing the
action on itself , which could easily make sense to us and help with
memorization . Howerver , this kind of interpretation doesn’t apply to all
reflexive verbs. For example, the German verb of ”to fall in love with someone”
is reflexive , but no matter how hard we’d try , it just couldn’t make sense to
comprehend it in the sense of “performing the falling in love action on oneself”
-if an action’s doer and receiver are the same , the verb takes a reflexive
pronoun
For example:
-Some verbs can mean something entirely different when taking reflexive
pronouns or objects of other kinds
For example:
For example:
1. Adjective + noun :
In German , adjectives can follow certain verbs such as “sein” as in “Das Auto
ist rot” (the car is red), which is called predicative adjectives , they can also
precede nouns as attributive adjectives as in “Das rote Auto ist billig” ( the red
car is cheap) , we can see that the attributive adjective has an extra “-e” at the
end .
When an adjective modifies a noun led by a definite article , this is how the
adjective’s ending changes in the nominative case:
in “alle/manche +adjective +noun” , the ending of the adjective follows the same
pattern as “Noun (pl.)” displayed in the table. for example, “alle jungen
Männer” (all young men)
For example:
NUMBERS 2
All the numbers in German are written as one word without hyphens or space .
An artificial slash to separate each number part :
Hundert hundred
Tausend thousand
Million million
Milliarde billion
Das Jahr dreitausendachtundsechzig The year 3068
(drei/tausend/acht/und/sechzig)
Im Jahr In 1872
achtzehnhundertzweiundsiebzig (
achtzehn/hundert/zwei/und/siebzig)
2. Ordinal numbers :
German ordinal numbers are used as adjectives and follow every adjective
inflection rule
• “First” is “erste”
• “second” to “Nineteenth” : cardinal number +-te(n)
• “Twentieth” and above : cardinal number +-ste(n)
Pay attention that the endings of the same ordinal number are not the same in
the two expressions here :
FESTIVAL
1. Weihnachten ( christmas):
People set up tents, drinking beer and catching up , with bands playing on stage
festivity everywhere.During Oktoberfest , women would dress themselves in
traditional Bavarian costume Dirndl and men in Lederhose (leather
pants/trousers)
SIMPLE PAST
The name says itself clearly : it’s used to describe past events.
However , Germans use the present perfect to describe past events instead of
the simple past . The latter is more often seen in writing .
Verb forms in the simple past are divided into the regular and irregular
the simple past verb forms for “ich” and “er/sie/es” are the same
For verbs whose stem ends in one of the following : -t, -d, -ffn, -chn, -gn
The simple past verb forms for “ich” and “er/sie/es” are the same
The simple past verb forms for “ich” and “er/sie/es” are the same
heute today
morgen tomorrow
übermorgen The day after tomorrow
gestern yesterday
vorgestern The day before yesterday
vorvorgestern Three days ago
3. The simple past of “ haben” and “sein":
the simple past verb forms for “ich” and “er/sie/es” are the same
TRAVEL 2
1. Names of continents :
Antarktis Antarctica
Afrika Africa
Asien Asia
Europa Europe
Nordamerika North America
Ozeanien Oceania
Südamerika South America
2. Travel activities :
- Tourism in Germany :
According to the statistics from the GNTB ( the German National Tourist
Board), Germany has always been a popular travel destination for Europeans.
Tourists from outside Germany tend to favor larger cities such as Berlin and
Munich. The most popular states for tourists from outside Germany are: Bavaria
(Bayern), Baden-Wuerttemberg (Baden-Württemberg), Berlin and North
Rhine-Westphalia ( Nordrhein-Westfalen)
Lübecker Marzipan
In a simple past sentence where a modal verb and an infinitive are present, the
modal verb needs to be in its simple past form while the infinitive stays
unchanged.
• Wipe off the two dots on the vowel of the modal verb
• Next , keep the “-n” ending of the verb, and put “-te” after the verb
stem
PAST PERFECT
The past perfect tense (also called the pluperfect ) usually appears with the
simple past because it describes events or actions that had taken place before
another one happened.
In past perfect sentence , replace “haben/sein” in the formula for the present
perfect with their simple past form:
Subject +haben/sein (in the simple past) +other components + past participle
The present perfect ich habe Deutsch gelernt I(ihave) learned German
The past perfect ich hatte Deutsch i had learned German
gelernt
the present perfect Sie ist gegangen She has gone/she left
the past perfect Sie war gegangen She had gone
2. Past participles revisit :
Pay attention to the tense of the main clause and the subordinate clause in
these examples:
GENITIVE
The german genitive case indicates possession and ownership . The message it
sends is the exact same as the English “of”
in modern spoken German, people tend to use the preposition ”von" to imply
ownership or possession much more often than the genitive.
The genitive is used for ”the owner” and follows right after “the owned”. It
doesn’t get affected by the case , nor the gender , nor the number of “the
owned”.
Nominative Genitive
(sg.) der Schüler das Buch des Schülers/ the book of
the middle schooler
(sg.) das Mädchen das Buch des Mädchens /the book of
the girl
(sg.) die Tänzein Die Schuhe der Tänzein/the shoes of
the (female) dancer
(pl.) die Kinder Die Spielzeuge der Kinder /the toys of
the children
(sg.) der Mann Die Frau des Mannes / the wife of the
man
(sg.) das Schloss der Tor des Schlosses /the gate of the
castle
(sg.) der Polizist (weak noun) das Auto des Polizisten /the car of the
police
(sg.) das Herz (weak noun) Der Wunsch des Herzens /the desire
of the heart
Notes :
(1) Masculine and neuter nouns add “-s” to their end in the genitive (for
some it’s “-es”)
(2) Masculine and neuter nouns that end in any of the following “-s, -ss,-ß,
-x ,-z, -tz” have the ending ”-es” in their genitive forms. for example,
“das Schloss”=> “des Schlosses”
(3) Single-syllable masculine and neuter nouns generally take “-es” in their
genitive forms as well. For example, ”der Mann” => "des Mannes”
(4) Feminine nouns and plural nouns don’t carry any extra endings in the
genitive
(5) Weak nouns such as ”Polizist” nned to have the suffix “-en” on them in
the genitive. “Herz” is an exception xception where it takes an extra “-s”
apart from “-en”
2. Genitive articles :
the genitive has everything to do with “ the owner” and nothing to do with
“the owned”
Noun m. f. n.
Sg. Des Schülers Der Frau des Kindes
Pl. Der Schüler Der Frauen der Kinder
(2) Indefinite article +noun:
Noun m. f. N.
Sg. Eines Schülers Einer Frau Eines Kindes
Pl. none none none
(3) Possessive pronoun +noun :
Noun m. f. n.
Sg. Meines Schülers Meiner Frau Meines Kindes
Pl. Meiner Schüler Meiner Frauen Meiner Kinder
3. Weak nouns (schwache substantive ) :
There’s a group of German nouns called ”weak nouns”. They end in “-en” in
every case except in the nominative , and they don’t change sound in the plural
wherever they are placed .
These weak nouns are all masculine with one exception : das Herz (the heart)
for exam
(2) Masculine nouns ending in “-and” , “-ant” , “-ist” are usually weak:
PASSIVE VOICE
1. Passive voice:
Both of them need an auxiliary verb. The former uses “werden” and the latter
uses “sein” :
Werden+past participle
“Werden” and “sein” need to conjugate to the right form according to the
sentence subject .
1) The accusative object in the active voice becomes the nominative subject in
the passive voice
2) now in the passive voice, the subject in the active voice can appear either in
the dative form after “von”, or can be omitted entirely
3) The verb in the active voice is now in its passive. Other than that , other
components stay unchanged
Examples :
The future:
Examples :
Tense Examples
The simple present Ich werde gefragt
The simple past du wurdest gefragt
The present perfect Er ist gefragt worden
The past perfect Wir waren gefragt worden
The Future Ihr werdet gefragt werden
The future perfect Sie werden gefragt worden sein
List of conjugations of “werden” in the simple present and in the simple past :
Only the accusative object in an active sentence can be the nominative subject in
the passive . If there’s no accusative object in the active voice, it would mean
that there’s no subject in the passive. Or the subject in the active voice is “man”
and the verb is intransitive. In those cases, we’ll need the dummy subject “es” to
form the subject-less passive .
“Es” is used to occupy the first position , which is supposed to be taken by the
subject , since according to the “Satzklammer”, the first position can’t be
vacant, or we can put whatever that succeeds the verb in the sentence to the
front to take that first position .
Active Passive
Die Studenten helfen ihm / the college Es wird ihm (von den
students is helping him (“ihm” is Studenten)geholfen (“es” takes the
dative , so no accusative object here) subject’s position)
Ihm wird (von den Studenten) (“ihm”
stays dative, “er” would be wrong)
He is being helped (by the college
students)
Man arbeitet am Wochenende nicht Es wird am Wochenende nicht
/people don’t work on weekends (no gearbeitet (“es” takes the subject’s
accusative object of the verb position)
“arbeitet”)
Am Wochenende wird nicht gearbeitet
(the time adverbial phrase “am
Wochenende” takes the first position)
People don’t work on weekends
Attention :
The dummy “es” takes the verb conjugation for the third person singular
RELATIVE PRONOUNS
1. Relative clauses:
They provide supplementary in the main clause , and are introduced by relative
pronouns. The noun/pronoun is called “Bezugswort”,and the verb in the relative
clause should be in the end position
Main Relative
clause clause
Er Ist ein Mann der sehr nett ist
he is a Man( (relative very nice is
Bezugs pronou
wort) n)
Translation : he is a very nice man
Main Relativ
clause e
clause
Das ist der Markt auf dem wir Obst kaufen
this is the Marke on (relati we fruit buy
t ve
(Bezug pronou
swort) n)
Translation : this is the market at which/where we buy fruit
Main Relative
clause clause
Das ist die Frau deren Schuhe schmut sind
zig
This is the Woman shoes dirty are
(Bezugs
wort)
Translation : this is the woman whose shoes are dirty
2. Relative pronouns :
The relative pronoun of choice depends on the gender and number of the
“Bezugswort”
What case role the relative pronoun plays in the relative clause is critical for
choosing the right form :
(1) when the relative pronoun is the subject of the clause , it should be
nominative
For example :
• Er ist ein Mann, der sehr nett ist ( “der Mann ist sehr nett”, nominative)
/he is a very nice man
(2) when the relative pronoun is the direct object of the verb/phrasal verb in
the relative clause, depending on the grammatical requirement of the verb/the
preposition in the phrasal verb , the relative pronoun will be either accusative or
dative
For example :
• Ich lese das Buch , das meine Freundin hasst (“Meine Freundin hasst das
Buch”, accusative)/i’m reading the book (that)my girlfriend hates
• Wir reden mit dem Mann, dem wir vorher geholfen haben. (“wir haben
dem Mann geholfen”, dative)/we’re talking to the man (whom) we helped
before
• Leo möchte sich mit der jungen Frau treffen, von der er täglich träumt
(“Er träumt täglich von der jungen Frau” von +dative)/leo wants to meet
the young lady (whom) he dreams of everyday
(3) when the relative pronoun is the indirect object of the verb/phrasal verb in
the relative clause , the , the pronoun should be dative
for example:
• Ich mag den Professor, dem ich mein Gedicht vorgelesen hebe ( “Ich habe
dem Professor mein Gedicht vorgelesen” , dative)/i like the professor who
i read my peom to
(4) When the relative pronoun indicates the possession of something by the
“Bezugswort”, the pronoun should be genitive
for example:
• Das ist die Frau, deren Schuhe schmutzig sind (Die Schuhe der Frau sind
schmutzig , genitive)/this is the woman whose shoes are dirty
Case m. f. n. Pl.
Nominative der die das die
Accusative den die das die
Dative dem der dem denen
Genitive dessen deren dessen deren
SUBJUNCTIVE II
Other than that , the subjunctive II can also express polite requests, which is
usually in the form of , the subjunctive II can also express polite requests, which
is usually in the form of questions
Wenn du mir bloß zuhören würdest! If only you would just listen to me!
Könnten Sie mir helfen? Could YOU help me?
The construction of the present subjunctive II:
For verbs whose stem ends in one of the following : -t, -d, -ffn, -chn, -gn
Examples :
the subjunctive II verb forms for ”ich” and “er/sie/es” are the same
if there’s “a/o/u” in the simple past verb, it needs umlaut and becomes “ä/ö/ü”
Because a great number of regular verbs share the same verb form in the simple
past and in the subjunctive II, people often use “würden (inflected for the
subject ) +infinitive “ as a replacement
The formula for the formation of the subjunctive II in the simple past is :
“Hätten” or “wären” ?
Examples :
Wenn ich mich doch nicht erkältet If only i hadn’t caught a cold !
hätte!
Was hättest du gemacht , wenn du If you had been free yesterday , what
gestern frei gewesen wärst? would you have done?
3. The subjunctive II of “sein” , “werden” and “haben” :
FUTURE II
The future perfect describes actions that will haveb been completed by a certain
point in the future
(2) Questions :
Reverse the sentence subject and “werden” , keep the rest of the sentence
unchanged , and put a question mark at the end
- Forming wh-questions: