German Wikibook
German Wikibook
German Wikibook
en.wikibooks.org
October 5, 2014
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Contents
1
German
Main Contents
Introduction
3.1 The German Language . . .
3.2 German and English . . . .
3.3 Vocabulary and Grammar .
3.4 Pronunciation . . . . . . . .
3.5 Layout of Lessons . . . . . .
3.6 Layout within Lessons . . .
3.7 The Student and the Lesson
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43
45
45
III
Contents
11.2
11.3
11.4
11.5
11.6
11.7
11.8
11.9
11.10
11.11
11.12
11.13
11.14
Food! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accusative Case . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Food-Related Verbs . . . . . . . . . . .
Modals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Hunger and Thirst . . . . . . . . . . .
Formal Conversations . . . . . . . . . .
Kein-words . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ordering at a Restaurant in Germany
Accusative case prepositions . . . . . .
Saying How Food Tastes . . . . . . . .
Dieser-forms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Money and Paying . . . . . . . . . . .
Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
12 Review 1.01
12.1 Vocabulary . . . . . . .
12.2 Wie heit Du? (1. Teil)
12.3 Wie heit du? (2. Teil) .
12.4 Bitte buchstabieren Sie .
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17 Review 1.02
111
17.1 Vocabulary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
17.2 Wie heit Du? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
IV
Contents
17.3 Freizeit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
17.4 Essen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
18 Section 1.03 Vienna, Austria
19 Lesson 1.07 - Das Fest
19.1 Dialogue . . . . . . . . . . .
19.2 Es gibt . . . . . . . . . . . .
19.3 Weihnachten in Deutschland
19.4 Dativstze . . . . . . . . . .
19.5 Weihnachtsessen . . . . . . .
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135
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145
29 Contents
147
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157
Contents
35 Review 2.01
159
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169
41 Review 2.02
171
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47 Review 2.03
183
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49 Contents
187
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197
VI
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Contents
57 Lesson 3.06 - Undeveloped
209
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63 Contents
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68 GRAMMAR
231
69 Contents
233
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71 Articles
241
72 Nouns
72.1 What Is a Noun?
72.2 Plurals . . . . . .
72.3 Gender . . . . . .
72.4 Contents . . . . .
243
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73 Gender
253
74 Plurals
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75 Adjectival Nouns
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76 Weak Nouns
259
77 Mixed Nouns
261
78 Pronouns
263
267
VII
Contents
80 Sentences
80.1 Sentence Structure in Main clauses . . . . . . . . . . .
80.2 Position of the Verb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
80.3 Order of phrases - Reihenfolge der Satzglieder . . . . .
80.4 Syntax of Interrogatives and Imperatives . . . .
80.5 Coordinating Conjunctions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
80.6 Dependent Clauses: Subordinate and Relative Clauses
80.7 Innitive Clauses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
81 Verbs
81.1 Verbs . . . . . . . .
81.2 Strong Verbs . . . .
81.3 Separable Verbs . .
81.4 Reexive Verbs . .
81.5 Modals . . . . . . .
81.6 Present Tense . . .
81.7 Perfect Tense . . .
81.8 Sentence Structure
81.9 Past tense . . . . .
81.10 Future Tense . . .
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271
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293
293
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305
305
306
309
310
316
317
319
82 APPENDICES
321
83 Contents
323
325
85 A.02
85.1
85.2
85.3
- Phrase Book
327
German Phrases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
Positionen (Locations) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 328
Common phrases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 328
88 A.05
88.1
88.2
88.3
88.4
88.5
VIII
II
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335
335
336
336
338
339
341
341
341
342
343
343
Contents
88.6 Blogs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343
88.7 Podcasts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343
88.8 Tandem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 344
89 A.07 - Namen
345
89.1 Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
89.2 Typical for young people . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
90 A.08 - False Friends
353
91 A.09
91.1
91.2
91.3
91.4
91.5
91.6
91.7
91.8
91.9
363
363
365
368
371
374
375
376
377
378
- Level I Vocabulary
Wie heit du? . . . . . . . .
Freizeit . . . . . . . . . . . .
Essen . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Kleidung . . . . . . . . . . .
Volk und Familie . . . . . .
Schule . . . . . . . . . . . .
Die Fete . . . . . . . . . . .
Privileg und Verantwortung
Wetter . . . . . . . . . . . .
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92 CONTRIBUTORS
379
93 Contributors
381
List of Figures
385
94 Licenses
94.1 GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
94.2 GNU Free Documentation License . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
94.3 GNU Lesser General Public License . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
389
389
390
391
1 German
2 Main Contents
Introduction1
Lessons
Level one lessons (Introductory lessons / einfhrende Lektionen)2
Level two lessons (Grundlegende Lektionen)3
Level three lessons (Zwischen-Lektionen)4
Level four lessons (Erweiterte Lektionen)5
Level ve lessons (Review lessons / berprfungs-Lektionen)6
Grammar7
Appendices (Anhnge)8
Contributors9
GFDL10
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
on
on
on
on
on
on
on
on
on
on
page
page
page
page
page
page
page
page
page
page
7
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3 Introduction
A Textbook on Five Levels
The question arose early in the development of this textbook as to precisely who would be
the target audience. Although intended to be a "beginning" textbook on German, many
felt that the early lessons were too dicult for younger students with very limited or no
experience with German and, perhaps more importantly, limited skills in English grammar.
For this reason a textbook on three levels was conceived. Beginning German1 (Level I)
puts more emphasis on building vocabulary around subject matter interesting and useful
to young students. Basic German2 (Level II) emphasises grammar, and assumes a greater
knowledge of English grammar more typical of an older high school or a college student.
If you are just beginning to learn German or attempting to teach yourself, you may wish
to try both approaches and see which works better for you, since some people require a
strong structural approach to learning a new language while others nd this "structure"
only impedes progress by adding another layer of complexity. Intermediate German3 (Level
III), which requires even more knowledge of English, is for college students, preferably for
sophomores or juniors. With even more complex lessons, grammar and vocabulary comes
Advanced German4 (Level IV), which with the most complex and dicult parts of the
German language, is for late college students (Seniors) and college graduates. The last level,
which is a review level, but also has cultural facts and the history of the German language,
is Reviewed German.5 (Level V). An existing, separate text, German/Grammar6 , may
eventually be merged into the lesson modules or developed into useful appendices as a
grammar reference. At present, however, German Grammar is an expanding, signicant
contribution to the textbook; it provides an important reference on German language grammar rules useful to the student working through any of the three levels.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20I
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20II
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20III
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20IV
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20V
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FGrammar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic%20language
Introduction
Namibia in Africa, have sizable German-speaking populations. There are German-speaking
minorities in several eastern European countries including Russia, and in the United States
as well as countries in South America like Brazil, Argentina and Chile. Over 120 million
people speak German as their native language. German is the third most popular foreign
language taught worldwide, and the second most popular in Europe. Continue reading
about the German language8 .
8
9
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German%20language
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/cognate
10
11
12
13
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3AEnglish-german%20words.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3AExample%20sentence.ogg
Chapter 90 on page 353
Chapter 6 on page 17
Introduction
as children, this process is so transparent that we have trouble conceiving of the importance
of having a large vocabulary. By the age of conscious recognition of our communicating
with others through speech, we have already learned the meaning of thousands of words.
Even words we have trouble dening, we readily understand their use in conversation. This
process can be "reactivated," as it were, by immersion in a second language: a method of
learning a new language by moving to a place where that language is spoken and having to
get around and live without use of one's native tongue.
The student of German language, if not residing in a German-speaking environment, must
put forth substantial eort to learning words, including their meaning, their pronunciation
and their usage in common sentences. Be sure to "learn"commit to memoryall of the
vocabulary words in each lesson as they are presented. Early lessons have simple sentences
because it is assumed that the student's vocabulary is limited. But throughout the text,
more complex discourses (often as photo captions) are included to introduce the student
to regular German in use. It may be helpful to translate these using a German-English
dictionary (access to one is a must; see Appendix 514 for on-line options). Other sources
of German, such as newspapers, magazines, web sites, etc., can also be useful in building
vocabulary and developing a sense of how German words are put together. The German
Wikipedia15 provides an ever expanding source of German language articles that can be
used for this purpose. Further, a German version of the Wikibooks projecta library of
textbooks in Germanis available at German Wikibooks16 .
German grammar is more complex than, but suciently similar to, English that "reading"
German is possible with minimal vocabulary in the sense that the student should generally
recognize the parts of a sentence. With a good dictionary or an online translator, an English
speaker can usually translate a German sentence close to correctly. However, to accurately
speak and understand German, you must learn how each word functions in a sentence.
There are eight basic grammatical functions: case, gender, number, tense, person,
mood, voice, and comparison. How words "signal" these functions is an important
aspect of learning a new language. English speakers should know all of these functions and
the signals used in English, but it is often the situation that you know perfectly well how
to speak English, without understanding much about word-functions and signals. For this
reason, this textbook incorporates considerable detail on grammar, including both English
and German grammar. The reference book English17 at Wikibooks may be consulted for
additional help. When we say German is more complex than English, what we really mean
is that the signals used in German are dierent from and more numerous than those used
by English.
3.4 Pronunciation
A guide to the pronunciation18 of German is provided. You should become familiar with
this page early on, and refer to it often. Nothing can replace learning a language from
14
15
16
17
18
10
Layout of Lessons
a native speaker, but the text is liberally sprinkled with audio les providing the student
with valuable input from hearing spoken German. Analyze the spoken words carefully. The
pronunciation guide can only closely, not exactly, convey how German words should be
pronounced. And of course, German (like English) has a number of dialects distinguished
by dierences in pronunciation.
Help in the pronunciation of individual words can be found by accessing the sound les of
either of the online dictionaries, links to which are given in the German websites19 appendix.
19
20
11
Introduction
5. A list of additional, related words or phrases (Andere Wrter; advanced lessons
only) that relate to, but are not included in, the vocabulary presented in the basic
and advanced lessons.
6. English sentences and other material to be translated by the student into German
(bersetzung). These are numbered and a matching answer sheet is linked to this
category. The student should write out the German using material from the lesson
(and previous lessons) before checking their work against the answer list.
21
12
Chapter 6 on page 17
13
5 Contents
#Lesson 1.00 - Introduction1
#Section 1.01 Starting Point2
#Lesson 1.01 - Wie heit du?3
#Lesson 1.02 - Freizeit4
#Lesson 1.03 - Essen5
#Review 1.016
#Section 1.02 Berlin, Germany7
#Lesson 1.04 - Kleidung8
#Lesson 1.05 - Volk und Familie9
#Lesson 1.06 - Schule10
#Review 1.0211
#Section 1.03 Vienna, Austria12
#Lesson 1.07 - Das Fest13
#Lesson 1.08 - Privileg und Verantwortung14
#Lesson 1.09 - Wetter15
#Review 1.0316
#Section 1.04 Berne, Switzerland17
#Lesson 1.10 - Zu Hause Essen18
#Lesson 1.11 - Filme19
#Lesson 1.12 - Das Haus20
#Review 1.0421
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
6 on page 17
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
3.3 on page 9
15
I.0: Introduction
Welcome to Level I German!
Level I is aimed at junior high and high school students. However, it can also be used by
others just beginning to learn to speak or read German.
The goal of Level I German is to introduce the basics of the German language without
overwhelming students. Therefore, the vocabulary is formatted for translating from English
(which the students know) into German.
Although Level II is aimed at students and people who are a bit procient after Level I,
still, English translation will be used, so as to ease the learning. It helps because, at times
while learning a new language, even with basic understanding, the words are above normal
understanding level, and thus require a "sub" assistance.
German has more letters than and dierent pronunciations from English.
In German the verb is sometimes the last word of a sentence.
German has more verb forms than English.
German is the only known written language where every noun is capitalized, whether or
not it is a proper noun.
The word ich (I) is only capitalized if it is the rst word of the sentence.
17
18
Figure 2
19
21
Figure 5
8.1 Dialogue
Read and listen to the following dialogue between two students: Franz and Greta. You
don't have to understand anything! You should rather try to nd out how each word is
pronounced.
Franz
23
Greta
Franz
Greta
Franz
Greta
How is the "a" in "Hallo", "Franz", "Greta", "ja", "danke", and "dann" pronounced?
How is the "i" in "ich" and "bis" pronounced?
How is the "ch" in "ich" pronounced?
How is the "z" in "Franz" pronounced?
How is the "w" in "wie", "Wei" and "wiedersehen" pronounced?
How is the "ie" in "wie" and "Wiedersehen" pronounced?
How is the "ei" in "heit", "heie" and "Wei" pronounced?
How is the "" in "heit", "heie" and "Wei" pronounced?
How is the "e" in "es", "kennst", "er" and "Herr" pronounced?
How is the rst "e" in "gehen", "Greta", and "geht" pronounced?
24
German
Hallo!
ich
Ich bin ...
wie
du
Du heit ...
Wie heit du?
Dialogue
English
My name is...
it
it goes
How is it going?
me
good
I'm good.
you know
Do you know...?
teacher
yes
he
His name is...
Mr.
oh
thanks
until
then
See you!
on
again
(to) see
Goodbye!
German
Ich heie ...
es
es geht
Wie geht's? (Longer: Wie geht es?)
mir
gut
Es geht mir gut. (Shorter: Mir geht's gut. Even shorter:
Gut.)
du kennst
Kennst du ...?
Lehrer
ja
er
Er heit ...
Herr
oh
danke
bis
dann
Bis dann!
auf
wieder
sehen
(Auf) Wiedersehen!
25
Good morning!
Good day!
Good evening!
Hello!
Goodbye!
Bye!
See you later!
See you!
See you soon!
Good night!
German
Hallo!*
Servus! (used in southern Germany and eastern Austria, informal)
Moin! (used in northern Germany)
Moin Moin! (used in northern Germany)
Guten Morgen!*
Morgen! (shorter)
Guten Tag!*
Tag! (used in Germany, shorter)
Guten Abend!*
Gr Gott! (used in southern Germany, Austria and South Tyrol)
Auf Wiedersehen!*
Wiedersehen! (shorter)
Tschss!*
Ciao! (pronounced as in Italian)
Servus! (used in southern Germany and eastern Austria, informal)
Bis spter!*
Bis dann!*
Bis bald!*
Bis gleich!
Gute Nacht!*
*You will need to know each expression with an asterisk (*) after it. The others, of course,
would be useful to know if you are traveling to regions where they are used. (As you can
see, the dierent German-speaking regions often have their own ways of saying hello and
goodbye. However, you will not be required to know any of these less common phrases for
any problems or tests.)
The more formal phrases are guten Morgen, guten Tag, and auf Wiedersehen. The less
formal ones are tschss, Tag, servus, and ciao. The others are somewhat neutral on the
formal-informal scale.
UNKNOWN TEMPLATE German/Exercise
Hellos and goodbyes How would you say hello and goodbye in these situations:
1.
2.
3.
4.
26
You
You
You
You
meet a
meet a
meet a
talk to
German
Herr
Frau
Frau is used for married and unmarried women. Some people still use Miss Frulein
in spoken German but it is no longer used in written German since it is considered an
inappropriate discrimination of unmarried women.
Literally, der Herr means the gentleman and die Frau means the woman. If you use these
words without a last name after them, you have to use an article before them; e.g., der Herr
or die Frau. This is actually just like in English. For example:
The woman's name is Mrs. Wei Die Frau heit Frau Wei.
Note also that the German translation of the man is der Mann and the lady should be
translated to die Dame. Thus, without last names you would rather use these pairs:
Mr. Schwarz
the man
The man's name is Mr. Schwarz.
the woman
The woman's name is Mrs. Schwarz.
ladies and gentlemen
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Herr Schwarz
der Mann
Der Mann heit Herr Schwarz.
die Frau
Die Frau heit Frau Schwarz.
27
German
Wie geht's? (longer: Wie geht es dir?)*
prima
gut
sehr gut
miserabel
schlecht
nicht (so) gut
ganz gut
Es geht so. (Or shorter: Geht so.)
_______ geht's?
Prima. _______ dir?
Es _______ so.
Wie geht _______ Ihnen?
Sehr _______. _______ selbst?
Ganz _______, danke.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Wie geht's?
Prima. Und dir?
Es geht so.
Wie geht es Ihnen?
Sehr gut. Und selbst?
Ganz gut, danke.
8.5 Test
The test consists of three parts: pronunciation, vocabulary, and translation. As always, you
should write down your answers before you check them. (Writing the German words is in
28
Test
fact a great way to practice the spelling of German words.) The vocabulary and translation
problems are all from English to German because this is what you have to learn if you
want to communicate in German. Once you are able to translate an English word to the
corresponding German word, it won't be any problem to translate the German word back
to English.
UNKNOWN TEMPLATE German/Exercise
Pronunciation
1. How do you pronounce "Ich heie ..."?
2. How do you pronounce "Franz"?
3. How do you pronounce "Wiedersehen"?
1. "i" as in "hit", "ch" as in "Loch", "h" as in "hotel", "ei" as the "i" in "times", ""
is pronounced just like a "s", last "e" as in "pet"
2. "f", "r", "n" similar to the English pronunciation of these letters, "a" as in "hard",
"z" like "ts".
3. "w" as the "v" in "vat", "ie" as the "ee" in "meet", "eh" is the long German "e"
(between "i" in "hit" and a "e" in "pet"), the other letters are pronounced similarly
in English.
UNKNOWN TEMPLATE German/Exercise
Vocabulary Translate from English to German:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
Mr.
Good evening!
how
Good morning!
teacher
(the) man
Good night!
you
(the) woman
Bye!
How are you?
thanks
bad
Good day!
I
Goodbye!
he
See you later!
Hello!
very good
Mrs.
yes
not (so) good
1. Herr
2. Guten Abend!
29
wie
Guten Morgen!
Lehrer
(der) Mann
Gute Nacht!
du
(die) Frau
Tschss!
Wie geht's?
danke
schlecht
Guten Tag!
ich
Auf Wiedersehen!
er
Bis spter!
Hallo!
sehr gut
(die) Frau
ja
nicht (so) gut
30
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
9.1 Dialogue
Literally, Freizeit means free time, i.e., spare time. In this dialogue, Franz and Greta are
familiarizing each other with their sports activities.
Franz
Greta
Franz
Greta
Franz
Greta
Franz
English
late
quarter
to (+ hour)
three
to play
I play
at (+ time)
soccer
(to) make; (to) do
you make; you do
sport(s)
lazy
(to) go
I go
now
to (+ place)
house
home (direction)
at home (place)
German
spt
das Viertel
vor (+ hour)
drei
spielen
ich spiele
um (+ time)
der* Fuball
machen
du machst
der Sport
faul
gehen
ich gehe
jetzt
nach (+ place)
das Haus
nach Hause
zu Hause
31
German
aber
der Spa
basketball
tennis
baseball
9-pin bowling
chess
board game
game
homework
the TV watching
the movie
German
der Sport
die Hobbys (singular: das Hobby) or das Steckenpferd
(-e)
der Fuball
der Football (pronounced as in English)
der Volleyball (the Volley- in Volleyball is pronounced
as in English)
der Basketball
das Tennis
der Baseball (pronounced as in English)
das Kegeln
das Schach
das Brettspiel
das Spiel
die Hausaufgaben (usually plural; singular: die
Hausaufgabe)
das Fernsehen (the TV: der Fernseher)
der Film
32
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Sports%20and%20Activities
plural
singular
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
English
I
you
he/she/it
we
you
they
play
play
plays
play
play
play
German
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie
spiele
spielst
spielt
spielen
spielt
spielen
33
34
plural
singular
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
English
I
you
he/she/it
we
you
they
do/make
do/make
does/makes
do/make
do/make
do/make
German
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie
mache
machst
macht
machen
macht
machen
35
36
plural
singular
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
English
I
you
he/she/it
we
you
they
-s
-
German
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie
-e
-st
-t
-en
-t
-en*
9.3.1 Examples
Was machst du?
What are you doing?
Ich spiele Basketball.
I'm playing basketball.
Spielst du Fuball?
Do you play soccer?
Ich mache Hausaufgaben.
I'm doing homework.
Er macht Hausaufgaben.
He's doing homework.
Machst/Treibst du Sport?
Do you play sports?
Note that in English one plays sport, while in German one does sport. You can also use the
question words from Lesson 32 to form more combinations:
Warum spielst du Baseball?
Why do you play baseball?
Wann machst du die Hausaufgaben?
When do you do the/your homework?
To say "not", use "nicht". "Nicht" goes after the verb but before the sport.
Wer spielt nicht Fuball?
Who doesn't play soccer?
Wir spielen nicht Tennis.
We don't play tennis.
German
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20I%2FBitte_buchstabieren_Sie%23Forming%
20Questions
37
German
und
aber
oder
Both German and English have compound sentences; the applications of these are enormous.
They can be used in lists and also in compound sentences. For example,
Ich spiele Basketball und er spielt auch Basketball.
I play basketball, and he also plays basketball.
The new word, also auch is very important. The one grammar rule about auch is that
it always comes after the verb.
German
lesen
schauen
sehen
arbeiten
schreiben
schwimmen
Schauen, schreiben and schwimmen are all regular verbs; i.e., they follow regular conjugations. To conjugate them, you rst remove the -en from the innitive to form the stem (i.e.,
schau-, schreib-, and schwimm-), and then add the correct ending. Here is an example:
verb (innitive)
schauen
conjugated form
ich schaue
Arbeiten is an irregular verb; however, it has a simple change. Whenever the ending starts
with a consonant, an -e- is added before it. For example, du arbeitest (not du arbeitst). As
well as er/sie/es/ihr arbeitet (not er/sie/es/ihr arbeitt).
Lesen is also an irregular verb. For the second and third person singular the form is liest,
i.e., du/er/sie/es liest (not du lesst).
Sehen is the last irregular verb. The second person singular is du siehst and the third person
singular is er/sie/es sieht.
3
4
38
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Spielen%2C%20Machen%2C%20and%20Other%
20Verbs
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Other%20Verbs%20and%20Their%20Conjugations
German
Was machst du gern*?
Ich spiele gerne*.
Was spielst du gerne*?
Ich spiele gerne* Fuball.
5
6
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http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Expressing%20likes%20and%20dislikes
39
9.5 Numbers
Numbers are among the most important and most useful words: we need them to talk
about time, amounts, money, etc. Even if you are "just" a tourist, you often cannot avoid
numbers. Learning numbers can be a bit of a pain; thus, here is some advice: whenever you
have time, count something in German; e.g., steps, cars, people, seconds, whatever: just
count.
English
zero
one
two
three
four
ve
six
seven
eight
nine
ten
eleven
twelve
thirteen
fourteen
fteen
sixteen
seventeen
eighteen
nineteen
twenty
twenty-one
twenty-two
twenty-three
24 - 29
thirty
31 - 39, etc.
forty
fty
sixty
seventy
eighty
ninety
hundred
hundred and one
two hundred
thousand
40
German
null*
eins
zwei**
drei
vier
fnf
sechs
sieben
acht
neun
zehn
elf
zwlf
dreizehn
vierzehn
fnfzehn
sechzehn
siebzehn
achtzehn
neunzehn
zwanzig
einundzwanzig*
zweiundzwanzig*
dreiundzwanzig*
analogous to 22 and 23
dreiig
analogous to 21 - 29
vierzig
fnfzig
sechzig
siebzig
achtzig*
neunzig*
hundert (or: einhundert)
hunderteins*
zweihundert*
tausend (or: eintausend)
Numbers
English
two thousand
German
zweitausend*
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Numbers
41
1
2
3
4
5
6
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FTest
http://www.flashcardexchange.com/flashcards/view/249128
http://www.flashcardexchange.com/flashcards/view/249218
Chapter 8 on page 23
Chapter 8 on page 23
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20I%2FFreizeit%2FTest
43
11.1 Dialogue
Franz
Greta
Franz
Greta
Greta
Franz
Greta
Franz
Greta
Franz
Greta
Greta
Franz
11.2 Food!
die Frchte (das Obst) - fruits
der Apfel
apple
die Banane
banana
die Erdbeere
strawberry
die Kirsche
cherry
die Orange
orange
die Traube
grape
die Zitrone
lemon
die Grapefruit
grapefruit
das Fleisch - meat
das Lammeisch
lamb
45
crab
shrimp
anchovies
salmon
eel
soup
French fries
pizza
hamburger
mustard
bread
butter
salad
pepper
rice
salt
sugar
jam
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
46
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Food%21
Chapter 6 on page 17
Chapter 8.5 on page 28
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject%20%28grammar%29
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct%20object
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preposition
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indirect%20object
Accusative Case
11.3.1 Articles
Denite Article
Indenite Article
Masculine
den
einen
Feminine
die
eine
Neuter
das
ein
Plural
die
-eine*
* The indenite article for plurals is non-existent. However related words, such as
possessives and the kein- words that you will learn later this lesson, will end in einefor
plurals.
In the articles, the memory hook for accusative case is "Der goes to den (pronounced "dane"
UNKNOWN TEMPLATE audio
De-den.oggaudio
) and the rest stays the same." The masculine indenite article goes to einen, and everything
else stays the same there. Therefore above, der Hamburger goes to den Hamburger and ein
Hamburger goes to einen Hamburger when the hamburger is the direct object, such as in
"Er hat einen Hamburger." ("He has a hamburger.")
If you are getting confused, it's ne. This topic is one of the hardest for English speakers
to grasp. Here are some solutions:
To nd out the case of something, rst nd the verb. The verb rules the sentence. Everything revolves around it. Next you nd the subject of the sentence. The subject is the
thing/person that is doing the verb. The subject is always in the Nominative Case,
so it takes on the der, die, das, die, or ein, eine, ein.
Now you look back at the verb. If it is a being verb (am, are, is, etc.), the next noun
after the verb is the predicate noun. An easy way to gure this out is to write an
equation. If the verb can be replaced with an equals sign (=), then the following noun is a
predicate noun. If it can't be replaced by an equals sign, refer to the next paragraph. The
predicate noun is also always in the Nominative Case, so the same rules apply
to it.
Ich bin ein Junge.
Sie ist eine Frau.
If the verb of the sentence is an action verb (playing, throwing, making, eating), nd what
the subject is doing the verb to. For example, if the verb is "makes" (macht), you look
for what is being made. That is the direct object. The direct object is always in the
Accusative Case, so it takes on the den, die, das, die, or einen, eine, ein.
Sie haben den Cheeseburger.
Habt ihr einen Salat?
The indenite articles, when you just look at their endings, select e, -, e for nominative
case, and en, e, -, e for accusative.
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48
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Articles
1st
2nd
3rd
Person
Singular
English
me
you
him, her, it
German
mich
dich
ihn, sie, es
Plural
English
us
you (all)
them
German
uns
euch
sie
Accusative Case
49
Of these ve verbs, only trinken and bekommen are regular. Essen is irregular (that's what
the "I" means). Do you remember from the last lesson 'lesen' and 'sehen'? In both of them,
the rst 'e' changed to 'ie' in the du- and er/sie/es-forms. Well essen experiences the same
change, except that it changes to 'i', not 'ie'. Also, it acts the same as 'lesen' in the du-form:
You don't have three s's in a row.
9
10
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http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Pronouns
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Antecedents
Person
1st
2nd
3rd
Singular
ich
du
er/sie/es
esse
isst
isst
Plural
wir
ihr
sie
essen
esst
essen
Food-Related Verbs
51
11.5 Modals
In the introduction13 , you learned that German has no helping verbs. Instead, they have
modals, words that basically do the same thing.
Modals are conjugated very dierently from normal verbs. The ich- and er/sie/es-forms are
always the same, while the du-form adds an 'st'. Most modals experience a vowel change
from singular to plural, and the rest is the same.
11.5.1 Mchten
'Mchten' isn't technically a modal, but it acts exactly the same. There is no vowel change,
and the ich- and er/sie/es forms are "mchte". Here is the complete conjugation:
11
12
13
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German%20spelling%20reform%20of%201996
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Food-Related%20Verbs
Chapter 6 on page 17
Person
1st
2nd
3rd
Singular
ich
du
er/sie/es
mchte
mchtest
mchte
Plural
wir
ihr
sie
mchten
mchtet
mchten
Modals
53
11.5.2 Wollen
'Wollen' is a true modal; it even changes vowels. Ich/er/sie/es will and du willst. Here is
the complete conjugation:
54
Person
1st
2nd
3rd
Singular
ich
du
er/sie/es
will
willst
will
Plural
wir
ihr
sie
wollen
wollt
wollen
Modals
55
14
15
16
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http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/will
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Modals
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Hunger%20and%20Thirst
Formal Conversations
Bitteschn!
Bitte sehr!
Gern geschehen! - Don't mention it
Gerne! - also meaning "gladly"
Kein Problem! - No problem
Dafr nicht!* - (Do) not (thank me) for this (only used in Northern Germany)
11.8 Kein-words
Twice you have been taught that the ending of the indenite article for plurals would be
eine (for Nominative and Accusative cases), if there was an indenite article for plurals.
17
18
Chapter 8 on page 23
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57
* "zum Amerikaner" is often used in a jokey way, to express that one is going to either McDonald's
or Burger King. There are few American restaurants, in Germany and they are mostly referred to
as "(American) Diner", so it is not used like "zum Italiener".
19
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20
21
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Chapter 8 on page 23
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60
Person
1st
2nd
3rd
Singular
ich
du
er/sie/es
schmecke
schmeckst
schmeckt
Plural
wir
ihr
sie
schmecken
schmeckt
schmecken
61
11.12 Dieser-forms
"The cheeseburger tastes good." does not sound that specic as to which cheeseburger you
are talking about. You could be talking about a cheeseburger that is not directly in front
of you. It just isn't clear. Now, if you said, "This cheeseburger tastes good.", it would be
obvious that you're talking about the cheeseburger you're eating. 'Dieser' is the German
translation for 'this': "Dieser Cheeseburger schmeckt gut."
11.12.1 Dieser
'Dieser' is a special adjective. It changes forms in dierent situations: dierent genders and
dierent cases. It can also mean 'these' when modifying a plural. Here are its forms:
Nominative Case
Accusative Case
Masculine
dieser
diesen
Feminine
diese
diese
Neuter
dieses
dieses
Plural
diese
diese
As you can see, dieser is only appropriate for modifying masculine nouns in nominative case.
But 'Cheeseburger', which is masculine, is the subject of the sentence, "Dieser Cheeseburger
schmeckt gut." So it is correct in that circumstance.
11.12.2 Jeder
Jeder means 'every'. It acts exactly like 'dieser' in its endings, so it should be easy to
remember. Here are the dierent forms:
Nominative Case
Accusative Case
22
62
Masculine
jeder
jeden
Feminine
jede
jede
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Saying%20How%20Food%20Tastes
Neuter
jedes
jedes
Dieser-forms
Notice the absence of the plural form. When you think about this, it's the same in English:
no one says 'every books'.
11.12.3 Welcher
'Welcher' is the third of this threesome of adjectives. 'Welcher' means 'which' and is used like
the other interrogatives23 (wer, was, wann, wo, warum, wie, and welcher). However, because
the general subject has to be specied, welcher must be inected before use: "Welcher
Hamburger ist seine?" Its forms have the same endings as 'dieser'.
Nominative Case
Accusative Case
Masculine
welcher
welchen
Feminine
welche
welche
Neuter
welches
welches
Plural
welche
welche
Tag
Monat
Morgen
Abend
Nachmittag
Feminine
Woche
Nacht
Neuter
Jahr
Wochenende
When extending to 'which Tuesday night?', remember that the night stays feminine on
Tuesday, so it stays "Welche Dienstagnacht?". Likewise, you can say 'every June' the same
as 'every month': 'jeden Juni'.
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Chapter 9 on page 31
63
25
64
Test
"How much is that?" - "Was macht das?" ("What does that make?") or the "umgangssprachliche" "Wie viel kostet das?"
* To ask for the bill you can say, "Bitte zahlen!", or make it a complete sentence: "Ich wrde gern
zahlen!", or "Wir mchten/wollen zahlen!". You can also say, "(Herr Ober), die Rechnung bitte!".
The term "der Ober" is the waiter, but this sounds very old fashioned and is hardly ever used
today. To address the waiter you would probably say "Entschuldigen Sie, ..." ("Pardon, ...") as in
"Entschuldigen Sie, wir wrden gern zahlen" (Pardon me, we would like to pay").
** Although it is perfectly OK to say Bedienung or Kellner when talking about a waiter or a
waitress, you should not address the waiter by saying "Bedienung!" or even Frulein! which is
regarded very impolite since the 1980s.
11.14 Test
The test will be located here27 , but the test for this lesson is not yet completed.
26
27
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http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FTest
65
12 Review 1.01
12.1 Vocabulary
English
Hello!
I
I am...
how
you
Your name is...
What is your name?
My name is...
it
it goes
How is it going?
me
good
I'm good.
you know
Do you know...?
teacher
yes
he
His name is...
Mr.
oh
thanks
until
then
See you!
on
again
(to) see
Goodbye!
German
Hallo!
ich
Ich bin ...
wie
du
Du heit ...
Wie heit du?
Ich heie ...
es
es geht
Wie geht's? (Longer: Wie geht es?)
mir
gut
Es geht mir gut. (Shorter: Mir geht's gut. Even shorter:
Gut.)
du kennst
Kennst du ...?
Lehrer
ja
er
Er heit ...
Herr
oh
danke
bis
dann
Bis dann!
auf
wieder
sehen
(Auf) Wiedersehen!
67
Review 1.01
English
Hello!
Good morning!
Good day!
Good evening!
Hello!
Goodbye!
Bye!
See you later!
See you!
See you soon!
Good night!
German
Hallo!*
Servus! (used in eastern Austria, informal)
Moin! (used in northern Germany)
Moin Moin! (used in northern Germany)
Guten Morgen!*
Morgen! (shorter)
Guten Tag!*
Tag! (used in Germany, shorter)
Guten Abend!*
Gr Gott! (used in southern Germany, Austria and South Tyrol)
Auf Wiedersehen!*
Wiedersehen! (shorter)
Tschss!*
Ciao! (pronounced as in Italian)
Servus! (used in eastern Austria, informal)
Bis spter!*
Bis dann!*
Bis bald!*
Bis gleich!
Gute Nacht!*
*You will need to know each expression with an asterisk (*) after it. The others, of course,
would be useful to know if you are traveling to regions where they are used. (As you can
see, the dierent German-speaking regions often have their own ways of saying hello and
goodbye. However, you will not be required to know any of these less common phrases for
any problems or tests.)
English
Mr.
Mrs.
English
How are you?
great
good
very good
miserable
bad
not (so) good
O.K.
all right
German
Herr
Frau
German
Wie geht's? (longer: Wie geht es?)*
prima
gut
sehr gut
miserabel
schlecht
nicht (so) gut
ganz gut
Es geht so. (Or shorter: Geht so.)
68
Vocabulary
English
Good morning.
you (formal)
You are... (formal)
Are you...? (formal)
no
late
I am late.
You're welcome.
also
later
See you later.
singular
plural
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
German
Guten Morgen.
Sie
Sie sind ...
Sind Sie ...?
nein
spt
Ich bin spt dran.
Bitte.
auch
spter
Bis spter.
English
I
you
he, she, it
we
you
they
German
ich
du, Sie*
er, sie, es
wir
ihr, Sie*
sie
German
Ich heie ...
Er/Sie/Es heit ...
Sie heien ...
Wir heien ...
Du heit ...
Ihr heit ...
Wie heit du?*
Wie heit ihr?*
*Remember, the formal way to ask someone's name is to ask Wie heien Sie?
singular
plural
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
English
I am called
you are called
he/she/it is called
we are called
you are called
they are called
German
ich heie
du heit
er/sie/es heit
wir heien
ihr heit
sie heien*
*The form of verbs for you (polite) Sie is exactly the same as for the plural, 3rd person
pronoun they sie.
69
Review 1.01
singular
plural
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
English
I am
you are
he/she/it is
we are
you are
they are
German
ich bin
du bist
er/sie/es ist
wir sind
ihr seid
sie sind*
*Don't forget that the form for you (polite) Sie is the same as for the plural, 3rd person
pronoun they sie.
singular
plural
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
English
I have
you have
he/she/it has
we have
you have
they have
German
ich habe
du hast
er/sie/es hat
wir haben
ihr habt
sie haben*
70
German
die Auskunft
Ich htte gern(e) ...
die Telefonnummer
aus Bern
Wie schreibt man das?
bitte
buchstabieren
natrlich
A wie Anton
zweimal
Die Nummer lautet ...
Characters
Umlauts
Examples
Ee
Ff
Gg
Hh
Ii
Jj
Kk
Ll
Mm
Nn
Oo
Pp
konom (economist)
Dd
rger (anger)
Cc
Bb
Aa
Rr
SS
Ss
Tt
Vv
Ww
Uu
Vocabulary
71
Xx
Review 1.01
English
who?
what?
where?
when?
why?
how?
singular
plural
German
wer?
was?
wo?
wann?
warum?
wie?
masculine
feminine
neuter
masculine
feminine
neuter
German
der Junge
die Frau
das Mdchen*
die Jungen
die Frauen
die Mdchen
English
the boy
the woman
the girl
the boys
the women
the girls
*Note that Mdchen is neuter. (In fact, almost all words with the ending -chen are neuter.)
singular
masculine
feminine
neuter
German
ein Mann
eine Frau
ein Mdchen*
English
a man
a woman
a girl
1
2
72
12.3.3 Names
Do you remember how to tell your or someone else's name?
Review6
73
Review 1.01
Review8
12.4.3 Articles
Do you remember the denite and indenite articles in German?
Review10
8
9
10
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German_Alphabet
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20I%2FBitte_buchstabieren_Sie%23Forming_
Questions
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75
Figure 6
77
14.1.1 Facts
It's Time to Change Time
Berlin's time is GMT+1. That means that they are 6 hours ahead of E.S.T. If it's 2:00pm
in New York City, it's 8:00pm (or 20:00) locally. Please note that Germany changes to
and from daylight-saving time a few weeks before the U.S., so time dierences still vary in
March and October.
Tip, Tip, and More Tip
In contrast to many other countries where waiters sometime 'live on the tips' in Germanspeaking countries service personnel always receive a regular wage (usually per hour) and
the tip is always an extra for good service. Not to give a tip will probably give the waiter
the impression that either service or product were not that good and you are too polite to
admit this, but not tipping is not considered 'rude'. If you tip you usually round up, up to
50 Cents for coee or up to the next 5euros for lunch, e.g. 2,70 becomes 3,00 and 21
become 25 . Also, tipping is only expected when you get served, i.e. when the service
personnel bring something to your table, so if you pay at a counter like at McDonald's
or StarBucks you don't tip at all. Only when having a large party, like celebrating your
birthday in a restaurant, you do extra tipping. For a night you should pay 30 EUR to
80EUR per waiter and give it separately to the manager (fr die Bedienung). In many
restaurants it is normal the tip is shared with the kitchen personnel. Paying with credit
card or debit card makes tipping dicult, because there is no line on the bill to ll in the
tip. Always tip when paying, don't leave money on the table.
Shopping Locations
There are two major shopping locations. The Kurfrstendamm in the old west is lined
with boutiques and department stores. It continues eastwards for about three hundred yards
where you can visit KaDeWe, the biggest department store in Europe. On the newlydeveloped Friedrichstrae in the old east, the famous French store Galleries Lafayette
is to be found together with a maze of underground shopping malls. Shops are generally
open 9am-8pm Monday through Saturday. In the outskirts most shops close at 4pm on
Saturdays.
78
Shopping
14.2 Dialogue
Sarah
Lisa
Sarah
Lisa
Sarah
Sarah
Lisa
Sarah
Lisa
Sarah
Angestellter Thomas
Sarah und Lisa
Angestellter
Thomas
Lisa
Angestellter
Thomas
Angestellter
Thomas
Lisa
Angestellter
Thomas
Morgen, Lisa.
Morgen. Wie geht's dir?
Gut, danke! Ich gehe zum Kurfrstendamm, mchtest du
mitkommen?
Ja, gerne. Ich hole vorher noch Geld.
Ich sehe dich dann am Kurfrstendamm.
am Kurfrstendamm
Hallo Lisa!
Hallo!
Wohin gehen wir zuerst?
Lass uns zu dieser Boutique gehen.
O.K.
in der Boutique
Hallo meine Damen!
Guten Tag!
Darf ich Ihnen helfen?
Ja, knnen Sie mir helfen, diesen Rock in meiner Gre zu
nden?
Natrlich.
Hier ist der Rock in Ihrer Gre.
Danke. Wo ist die Umkleidekabine?
Dort drben.
14.3 Shopping
There is a lot to say about shopping, places to shop at, money and items to buy. In this
lesson we will cover most of it. There are two big shopping locations in Berlin. They are
Kurfrstendamm and KaDeWe.
English
Babywear
Children's Wear
(Children) department
Clearance Sale
Closed
Clothing
Computer Section
Cosmetics
Customer
Customer Service
Electrical Appliance
German
die Babyartikel (plural)
die Kinderbekleidung
die (Kinder-)Abteilung
der Rumungsverkauf
geschlossen
die Kleidung
die Computerabteilung
die Kosmetik (singular) die Kosmetika (plural)
der Kunde
der Kundendienst
das Elektrogert
79
German
die Rolltreppe
die Mode
das Mbelstck (singular), die Mbel (plural)
der Geschenkartikel
preiswert
die Lebensmittel (plural)
der Schmuck (no plural)
die Damenschuhe (plural)
die Lederwaren (plural)
genet
die nungszeiten (plural)
das Geschenk
reduziert
die Preissenkung
der Kassenbon, der Kassenzettel, die Quittung
das Andenken
das Sonderangebot
die Sportartikel (plural)
die Schreibwaren (plural)
der Sommerschlussverkauf (abbr. SSV)
die Videothek
der Winterschlussverkauf (abbr. WSV)
14.3.1 Kurfrstendamm
Kurfrstendamm
Tauentzienstrae
Fasanenstrae
The Kurfrstendamm has many boutiques, department stores, etc., which are on
Tauentzienstrae and Fasanenstrae, two streets in Kurfrstendamm. Tauentzienstrae
has a lot of the department stores, including KaDeWe, which we will get into greater detail
later. Fasanenstrae has a lot of the boutiques.
English
Department Store
Retail Store
The Mall
Boutique
Store
German
das Kaufhaus (old fashioned "das Warenhaus")
das Einzelhandelsgeschft
das Einkaufszentrum
die Boutique
das Geschft
And some of the things you might say or ask while in a clothing store...
Knnen Sie mir helfen, meine Gre zu nden (fr dieses ____)?
Can you help me nd my size (for this ____)?
80
Shopping
Wo ist die Umkleidekabine?
Where is the dressing room?
English
Manager
Employee
Sales Clerk
Cashier
Dressing Room
Men's Section
Women's Section
German
der Manager
der/die Angestellte
der Verkufer
der Kassierer
die Umkleidekabine
die Mnnerabteilung
die Frauenabteilung
German
Erstes Stockwerk
Mnnerkleidung
Zweiter Stock
Frauenkleidung
Dritter Stock
Kinderabteilung
Vierter Stock
Elektronik
Kchenbedarf
Fnfter Stock
Beleuchtung
Bettwsche
Spielwaren
Sechster Stock
Lebensmittel
Since we already have most of the general shopping phrases and vocabulary down, we are
going to get into more detail in the next few sections.
1
2
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Kurf.C3.BCrstendamm
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23KaDeWe
81
German
die Elektronik
das Fernsehen/der Fernseher, die Fernseher (plural)
die Digitalkamera, die Digitalkameras
das Telefon, die Telefone
das Mobiltelefon/das Handy (pronounced "Hendee"), die Mobiltelefone/Handys
der Computer/der Rechner, die Computer/Rechner
der Lautsprecher, die Lautsprecher
die DVDs (singular: die DVD)
die CDs (singular: die CD)
der DVD-Player
der CD-Player
German
die Bettwsche
die Decke, die Decken
das Kopfkissen/das/der Polster (Austrian German), die
Kopfkissen/Polster
der Kopfkissenbezug, die Kopfkissenbezge
das Betttuch, die Betttcher
der Bett-Rock
And like always here are some of the things you might say that are related to bedding.
3
82
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Electronics
Money
Passen die Kopfkissenbezge auf das Kopfkissen?
Does the pillow case t the pillow?
And with that question there are other variations of it you can ask, like...
Passt die Decke auf das Bett?
Does the blanket t the bed?
14.4 Money
Germany, Austria, Luxemburg, Belgium and Sdtirol in other words: all German speaking
regions except Switzerland and Liechtenstein have given up their former currencies and
adopted the Euro as of 1999. Because they are not members of the European Union,
Switzerland and Liechtenstein have kept the Swiss Francs. Currently 1 EUR is 1.34 USD.
Now if you were at a shopping center in German like Kurfrstendamm, and you were
shopping at a boutique here is some vocabulary you might want to know.
Was macht das?
Was kostet das?
How much does it cost?
Das Hemd kostet 120 Euro.
The shirt costs 120 euros.
Das kostet 690 Euro.
That costs 690 euros (all together).
English
Price
Note
Coin
1 Euro coin
2 Euro coin
5 Euro note
10 Euro note
100 Euro note
German
der Preis
der Schein
die Mnze
das Eurostck, das Ein-Euro-Stck
das Zweieurostck
der Fnfeuroschein
der Zehneuroschein
der Hunderteuroschein
Note: The word coin (Mnze) mostly turns to Stck when a word or number is put together
with it.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Bedding
83
German
das Centstck
das Zweicentstck
das Fnfcentstck
das Zehncentstck
das Zwanzigcentstck
das Fnfzigcentstck
14.5 Clothing
English
Skirt
Pullover
Sweatshirt
Scarf
Jacket
Coat
Shirt
T-shirt
Sweater
(Neck)tie
Bowtie
Suit
Pants
Underpants
Boxershorts
Top
Bra
Swimming costume
Trunks
Hat
84
German
der Rock, die Rcke (plural)
der Pullover, die Pullover
das Sweatshirt, die Sweatshirts
der Schal, die Schale/Schals
die Jacke, die Jacken
der Mantel, die Mntel
das Hemd, die Hemden
das T-Shirt, die T-Shirts
der Sweater, die Sweater
die Krawatte, die Krawatten
die Fliege, die Fliegen
der Anzug, die Anzge
die Hose, die Hosen (note: "die Hose IST"="the (pair of) pants
ARE")
die Unterhose, die Unterhosen
die Boxershorts (plural)
das Top
der Bstenhalter/der Busenhalter (abbr. BH), die Bstenhalter/Busenhalter
der Badeanzug, die Badeanzge
die Badehose, die Badehosen
der Hut, die Hte
Clothing
English
Shoe
Sock
Stocking
Tights/Pantyhose
Glove
Blouse
Cap
Woollen hat
German
der Schuh, die Schuhe
die Socke, die Socken
der Strumpf, die Strmpfe
die Strumpfhose, die Strumpfhosen
der Handschuh, die Handschuhe
die Bluse, die blusen
die Mtze, die Mtzen
die Wollmtze, die Wollmtzen
English
Size
Color
Cotton
Leather
Rayon
German
die Gre, die Gren
die Farbe, die Farben
die Baumwolle
das Leder
die Kunstseide
English
Small
Medium
Large
Extra-Large
German
klein (abbr. S)
mittel (abbr. M)
gro (abbr. L)
extragro (abbr. XL)
German
gnstig, billig
teuer
schn
hsslich
weich
neu
breit
weit
eng
bequem
unbequem
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Clothing
85
86
German
aussehen
Er sieht aus
anprobieren
Er probiert an
anziehen
Er zieht an
nehmen
kaufen
anhaben, tragen
Er hat an
14.7 Tragen
Instead of "anhaben" the verb "tragen" is often used. The sentences from above would then
be:
"Ich trage einen Mantel." ("I'm wearing a coat." )
"Was trgst du?" ("What are you wearing?")
"Du willst einen Mantel tragen." ("You want to wear a coat.")
"Willst du eine Bluse tragen?" ("Do you want to wear a blouse?")
The verb "tragen" has two meanings: "to wear" and "to carry". So if someone says "Ich
trage Schuhe" only the context will tell you whether the person is carrying the shoes in his
hands or actually wearing them. Tragen is a dierent kind of irregular verb -- one that not
only changes at the end of the word, but also changes internally. Notice that the vowel
in tragen's second and third-person forms changes from an a into an . Other verbs with
similar conjugation patterns include fahren, graben, schaen, and waschen.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Separable%20Prefix%20Verbs
87
Person
1st
2nd
3rd
Singular
ich
du
er/sie/es
trage
trgst
trgt
Plural
wir
ihr
sie
tragen
tragt
tragen
88
Colors
14.8 Colors
Color are also another great way to describe clothes like Das rote Hemd passt gut.which
means The red shirt ts well.
Read the following paragraph, try to nd the words described to have a color.
Wir fahren in den Schwarzwald. Ich habe ein grnes Hemd getragen. Die Reise war lang.
Es begann klter zu werden und abzukhlen. Ich hrte Musik auf meinem braunen iPod.
Ich bin schlielich eingeschlafen. Als ich aufwachte, sah ich den blauen Himmel und den
weien Schnee.
If you found 5 words you are right.
Schwarz which means black (the Schwarzwald (Black Forest) is a wooded mountain range)
Grnes Hemd which is a green shirt.
Brauner iPod which is a brown iPod.
Blauer Himmel which is blue sky.
And weier Schnee which is white snow.
And now for the actual colors...
Red
Blue
Green
Orange
Violet
Yellow
Brown
Indigo
Gray
Black
White
"Rot"
"Blau"
"Grn"
"Orange"
"Violett"
"Gelb"
"Braun"
"Indigo"
"Grau"
"Schwarz"
"Wei"
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems%23Colors
89
Figure 7
91
15.2 Dialog
Vater Karl
Opa Rudolf
Oma Lisa
Sohn Thomas
Tochter
Marie
Mutter Bettina
Tochter Marie
Mutter Bettina
Sohn Thomas
Mutter Bettina
Sohn Thomas
Mutter Bettina
Vater, Mutter und die Geschwister bekommen Besuch von Oma und
Opa
Hallo Mama, Hallo Papa! Wie geht es euch?
Na mein Enkel, du bist ja richtig gro geworden!
Mir geht's gut. Ich gehe zum Kurfrstendamm. Mchtet ihr mit mir
kommen?
Ja, Opa, ich wei.
Oma! Hast du uns etwas mitgebracht?
Nun sei nicht so aufgeregt Marie, lass Oma und Opa erst einmal
hereinkommen.
kurze Zeit spter, die Geschenke wurden schon ausgepackt...
Mutti! Thomas nimmt mir immer meine Puppe weg.
Thomas! Du sollst deiner Schwester nicht ihre Puppe wegnehmen.
Nein, das ist meine Puppe.
Nein. Die Puppe gehrt deiner Schwester.
Gut, hier hast du die Puppe...
Und bedanke dich bei deinen Groeltern, Marie.
15.3 People
15.3.1 The Family
Home is where the heart is, they say. And what is in the home? Family! of course, so this
is a very important section of the lesson. It'll give all vocabulary for the family, and later
in a dierent section, you'll learn how to describe your brothers and sisters or any person!
And now to get started lets do some vocabulary...
English
Son
Daughter
Father
Mother
Dad
Mum
Grandfather
Grandmother
Grandpa
Grandma
Sister
Brother
92
German
der Sohn, die Shne (plural)
die Tochter, die Tchter
der Vater, die Vter
die Mutter, die Mtter
der Papa (informal), der Vati/der Papi (informal)
die Mama (informal), die Mutti/die Mami (informal)
der Grovater, die Grovter
die Gromutter, die Gromtter
der Opa, die Opas
die Oma, die Omas
die Schwester, die Schwestern
der Bruder, die Brder
People
English
Siblings
Grandson
Granddaughter
Wife
Husband
Father-in-law
Mother-in-law
Brother-in-law
Sister-in-law
Son-in-law
Daughter-in-law
Uncle
Aunt
German
die Geschwister
der Enkel/der Enkelsohn, die Enkelshne
die Enkelin, die Enkelinnen
die Ehefrau, die Frau (informal), die Gattin (formal)
der Ehemann, der Mann (informal), der Gatte (formal)
der Schwiegervater
die Schwiegermutter
der Schwager, die Schwagern
die Schwgerin, die Schwgerinnen
der Schwiegersohn, die Schwiegershne
die Schwiegertochter, die Schwiegertchter
der Onkel, die Onkel
die Tante, die Tanten
Now even though many of these are common phrases you and I would say in everyday life,
some of these are rather used when you are on a visit to grandmother's, or things your
mother would say. Maybe you notice some of these in the dialogue. Now you might be
asking "How am I going to speak uent German, if I just learn phrases?" Like I said, these
are basically from the dialogue, and you can study these to look at the word order. Also
certain things are just dierent in German, like "Wie heit du?" which translates literally
to "How are you called?" when we use "What is your name?". Okay let's get started on
these common phrases...
Du bist ja richtig gro geworden.
You have grown up so much (usual sentence used by Opa und Oma)
Hast du uns etwas mitgebracht?
Have you brought something for us?
Nun sei nicht so aufgeregt.
Now don't be so excited.
Komm rein.
Come in.
(Sie) Wurden schon ausgepackt.
(They) Have already been opened.
(Sich) Bedanken fr etwas.
To thank for something.
Using Formal and Informal Pronouns in the Family
Some very conservative families might still use Sie with grandparents or even parents!
This is sometimes practiced in families of nobility or exterritorial cultural islands in which
93
German
nett, sympathisch
unfreundlich, gemein
es, gemein
schn
hsslich
intelligent
unintelligent
schlau, klug, clever
dumm/bld/deppert (Austrian German)
interessant
langweilig, fad (Austrian German)
rhrig, aktiv
faul
komisch, witzig
ernst(haft)
stark, krftig
schwach
eigenartig
begabt, talentiert
unbegabt, untalentiert
rechthaberisch
unttig
alt
jung
fett, dick
dnn
gro
klein
bse
The verb used most often for describing is "to be" which we learned in the rst lesson. Some
examples are: He iswet, This isstupid, I amlazy. But you do use other verbs like feel, look,
etc. This lesson we will be sticking mostly with the verbs we've learned in the past. We
will, however, learn one new verb. All sentences we will create will be in the nominative
case. Okay, let's get started!
94
People
In term of beauty, you can say four basic things. These aren't the all but these are the
easiest and simplest ones.
She is beautiful.
Sie ist schn.
He is ugly.
Er ist hsslich.
These two use the verb to be, and the next one will use the verb to look which would need
something else in order to make sense.
She looks beautiful, but that shirt is ugly.
Sie sieht schn aus, aber dieses Hemd ist hsslich.
He looks ugly, but he looked handsome yesterday.
Er sieht hsslich aus, aber gestern sah er schn aus.
And in the last sentence it says "ausgesehen." Don't worry about that--it wouldn't be taught
until Level 3. So since you get the idea of describing, let's learn a new verb! And the new
verb is klingen which is to sound. As in "He sounds weird.", "She sounds boring." Since
we know how to describe, we really don't have to cover it. It's works just like other verbs.
He sounds nice.
Er klingt nett.
They sound funny.
Sie klingen komisch.
Remember that when describing it's S+V+A, or subject, verb, then adjective. Exactly like
in English. For right now, that's all for describing things. We are going to have some small
describing lessons with some parts of this lesson.
German
sein
aussehen, ausschauen (Austrian German)
Er sieht aus
(sich) fhlen
klingen
95
15.3.4 Nationality
This is also a large section of this lesson: nationality, and it's very important. There are
many nationalities, too many to go over in this lesson, but you will learn more nationality
as this level and book goes on. Right now we are just going to have a vague little list, and
as this section goes on there will be more. Finally, gentlemen, get ready to have your minds
blown...
Some Nationalities
This is the small list, make sure you memorize this list and the next one.
English
German(s)
American(s)
Englishman
Spaniard(s)
Italian(s)
Frenchman
German
(masculine) der Deutsche, (m. plural) die Deutschen; (feminine) die
Deutsche, (f. plural) die Deutschen
der Amerikaner, die Amerikaner; die Amerikanerin, die Amerikanerinnen
der Englnder, die Englnder; die Englnderin, die Englnderinnen
der Spanier, die Spanier; die Spanierin, die Spanierinnen
der Italiener, die Italiener; die Italienerin, die Italienerinnen
der Franzose, die Franzosen; die Franzsin, die Franzsinnen
96
People
More Nationalities
A longer list of nationalities found in and around Germany:
African
Albanian
Austrian
Czech
Chinese
Dane
Dutchman/woman
Estonian
Finnish
Greek
Hungarian
Irish
Indian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Norwegian
Polish
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovakian
Swede
Swiss
Turkish
Ukrainian
15.3.5 Age
Now we are all familiar with the word "alt", which meansold. And in English, to nd
out somebody's age we ask "How old are you?". In German it is exactly the
same. The "alt" kind of belongs to the interrogative adverb, so in both German
and English it may be in front of the verb:
Wie alt bist du?
How old are you?
Now to ask the question with 1st person it is...
Wie alt bin ich?
How old am I?
And as response you might get...
97
98
Possessives
The responses to this are...
Er ist __ Jahre alt.
He is __ years old.
Sie ist __ Jahre alt.
She is __ years old.
And now the plural 3rd person of question and response...
Wie alt sind sie?
How old are they?
And of course the response...
Sie sind __ Jahre alt.
They __ years old.
Now with some people you might be able to guess their age, and you could ask them directly
about it. This is usually pretty of rude, but it illustrates nicely how the phrase has to be
changed if you ask a yes-no-question, so let's get started, anyway!
Bist du __ Jahre alt?
Are you __ years old?
Ist er/sie __ Jahre alt?
Is he/she __ years old?
Sind sie __ Jahre alt?
Are they __ years old?
Note the inversed order between "Wie alt bist du?" und "Bist du __ Jahre alt?" This is
exactly the same as in English!
15.4 Possessives
99
100
1st
2nd
3rd
Person
Singular
English
my
your
his, her, its
German
mein
dein, Ihr
sein, ihr, sein
Plural
English
our
your
their
German
unser
euer, Ihr
ihr
Expressing Favorites
Note: 'Euer' is irregular. When 'euer' has to have a dierent ending the e before r is
dropped, so it turns into 'eur-'.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/%2FProblems
101
103
16.2 Dialogue
Silke: Jetzt haben wir Mathe.
Torsten: Oh nein, ich habe berhaupt keine Lust dazu.
Silke: Hast du die Aufgaben gemacht?
Torsten: Ja, im Bus.
Silke: Super! Kann ich sie abschreiben?
"Lust (zu etwas) haben" means "feeling like (it)". "Ich habe keine Lust (dazu)" is "I don't
feel like (it)". "Ich habe berhaupt keine Lust" emphasizes it, meaning "I don't feel like it
at all."
Hast du die Aufgaben gemacht?
Have you the tasks done?
104
"Super", "Cool", "Toll", are common exclamations ... "Noch schnell" is here meant as
"while there is still time"
Lehrer (Betritt den Raum): Guten Morgen!
Teacher (enters the room): Good Morning!
Klasse: Guten Morgen!
Class: Good Morning!
Wer mchte die Aufgaben an der Tafel rechnen? Florian?
Who would like the tasks on the blackboard calculate?
"Who would like to do these questions on the blackboard?" Note that "Tafel" is related
to "table", meaning a at surface, and indeed German "Tafel" can also designate a table
prepared for a feast.
Don't let the weird order of the words disturb you, even if the phrase seems totally incomprehensible at rst. I'll try to construct this bit by bit:
This is the basic question and answer pair:
"Wer rechnet?" - "Ich rechne."
"Who calculates?" - "I calculate."
Note that the "to" is already included in the German word "rechnen". "Rechnen" is clearly
already an innitive, and doesn't need a "zu" to prove it. This is one of the main reasons
why complicated conjugations can survive, they contain information that doesn't have to
be expressed otherwise then...
To be a little more polite (or at least seem like it, since our teacher probably wouldn't take
a no for an answer)
"Wer mchte rechnen?" - "Ich mchte rechnen!"
"Who would like to calculate?" - "I would like to calculate"
This is another example for brevity by conjugation. The word "mchte" contains the
"would", as it is a "Konjunktiv"-form of the word "mgen" which translates to "like".
Don't be discouraged, many Germans don't realize this, and many don't use the Konjunktiv
correctly, if ever. However, "ich mchte"-phrases are extremely popular, so just use them,
even if you didn't understand yet a word of the explanation above ;-)
Let's introduce objects in our phrase:
105
This is a direct object, "Aufgabe" is in the accusative case. Because this is a feminine
noun, this is not so obvious, but the structure is the same as in:
"Wer sieht den Mann?" - "Ich sehe den Mann."
"Who sees the man?" - "I see the man."
Now, we also have an adverbial expression of the place. This is an expression that denes
the verb, thus ad-verbial.
"Wer rechnet an der Tafel?" - "Ich rechne an der Tafel"
"Who calculates on the blackboard?" - "I calculate on the blackboard"
Note that the order expressions is widely interchangeable. You can emphasize something
by putting it closer to the end of the question.
And now for the whole phrase in all its glory:
"Wer | mchte | die Aufgabe | an der Tafel | rechnen?" - "Ich | mchte | die
Aufgabe | an der Tafel | rechnen."
"Who | would like | the task | on the blackboard | calculate?" - "I | would
like | the task | on the blackboard | calculate."
"Florian goes to the blackboard, writes down and reads out aloud"
"zur" is another contraction, this time of "zu" and "der". Note that after "zu" follows the
dative case, so "der" is not the masculine but the feminine article.
"anschreiben" splits to "schreibt an", and means literally "writing on". It is often used
when writing legibly on a large, visible surface such as blackboard or a ipchart.
"vorlesen" splits to "liest vor" and translates to "read aloud".
106
So, as you might have guessed, plus and minus are the same as in English - they are just
pronounced German. The verbs "addieren" and "subtrahieren" are probably not dicult
either... "Ist gleich" or short "gleich" or just "ist" corresponds obviously to "is equal to"
or "equals".
"mal" means "times". This is also used in every day phrases, such as "100mal habe ich
dir gesagt ..." "I told you a 100 times ..." The corresponding verb is "malnehmen" or
"multiplizieren"
"geteilt durch" is literally "divided by", and the verb is "teilen" or "dividieren".
Lehrer: Sehr gut, Florian! Very good, Florian!
Now, that was easy!
Die Glocke lutet. Es ist Fnfminutenpause.
The bell rings. It is five-minute-break
Between single classes, there is usually a break of ve minutes to allow teachers and students
to go from one classroom to another. In most schools, classes such as German, English,
History, Philosophy are taught in the classroom. Classes that use special equipment, such
as all sciences, music and arts and of course computers and sport are being taught in a
specialized lab classes. Roughly every second break is 15 minutes long, and if there are
lessons in the afternoon, there's often a break of 45 to 60 minutes for lunch.
Schnell, wir mssen zu Musik!
Quick, we must to music!
This sentence sounds strange. This is, because in everyday German, sometimes the verb
gehen can be left out, if it is clear what is meant. In this case, the complete phrase would
have to be "Wir mssen zu Musik gehen". But since Torsten will not think Silke is going
to y there, there will be no misunderstanding. Additionally, the word "class", or "course"
is missing, which is the usual way of students to talk about their subjects.
Note: In English, the phrase might be "We have to go to the music room" instead of must.
The German translation "Wir haben in den Musikraum zu gehen" would be understood,
but is quite formal. Additionally, there is a connotation that the speaker distances himself
from the order he is being given.
Au ja, darauf freue ich mich schon!
Oh yes, to this look forward I myself already!
107
I am happy
you are happy
he, she, it is happy
we are happy
you are happy
they are happy
Note that "to be happy" actually would be rather translated by "glcklich sein", but it is
the closest English equivalent to "sich freuen".
"Sich ber etwas freuen" means "to be happy about something". This is kind of selfexplanatory. But "sich auf etwas freuen", literally "to be happy on something" means
"to look forward to". This is a common phrase that uses the on in the same wide sense as
in "on drugs", or "living on something" - there is no spatial relation here...
In "darauf" you recognize the "auf". The "da" is a demonstrative prounoun such as in
"that place". "Darauf" actually is another contraction which developped a long time ago
from "da-herauf". The "darauf" is referencing the word "Musik" from Silke's sentence.
So "Au ja, darauf freue ich mich schon" or "to-this look-forward I myself already" just
means "Great, I'm already looking forward to that"
Maybe it comforts you a little that the English phrase in a word-by-word translation to
German would be just as unintelligible...
Was machen wir heute?
What make we today?
"What we (are going to) do today?" Note again, that "machen" often does not translate
to "make", but to "do"!
Wir wollen ein Lied von Grnemeyer singen!
We want a song of Grnemeyer sing!
108
Aufgabe
Note that adding a "glaube ich" is another common phrase, exacly as "I think" or "I believe"
can be added to an English phrase. (Never mind the word order, this is because Alcohol is
the object, so the verb is at the second position in the text)
Herbert Grnemeyer1 is a very popular German rock singer from the Ruhr region. His most
famous songs include "Mnner", "Bochum" (a city in the Ruhr region), "Mensch" and also
"Alkohol".
Nach dem Musikunterricht:
After the music class:
"Unterricht" comes from "unterrichten" "to teach", and means simply "class". Better not
think about "under" and "right" here, which you might have correctly recognized as the
word's components "richten" literally means "to correct".
Jetzt haben wir nur noch Geschichte...
Now have we only still history...
"Come on, let's skip class and go to the bistro instead". As in English, "Komm" can be
used to motivate others.
There is yet another contraction here "ins" is derived from "in das", meaning "in the".
"das" is the neutral article in accusative case here.
Schon wieder!
Already again!
16.4 Aufgabe
Make a list of all the contractions used in this chapter. Can you determine the full tables?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert%20Gr%C3%B6nemeyer
109
16.5 School
16.5.1 Vocabulary
School-Related Verbs
Lesen
Schreiben
Rechnen
maths)
Studieren
Lernen
Zeichnen
Malen
To Read
To Write
To Calculate (doing
To
To
To
To
Study
Learn
Draw
Paint
School Subjects
Deutsch
Englisch
Russisch
Franzsisch
Latein
Mathe
Mathematik
Sport
Kunst, Zeichnen
Musik
Werken
Sachkunde, Sachunterricht
Elementary School
Geschichte
Erdkunde
Politik
Biologie
Geografie
Religion
Ethik
Chemie
Physik
Informatik
Elektronische Datenverarbeitung
German
English
Russian
French
Latin
Maths
Mathematics
PE or Gym
Arts
Music
Crafts
Science Lesson in
History
Geography
Politics
Biology
Geography
RE or Religion
Ethics
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
Computer Science
110
Eraser/Rubber
Pencil
Pen
Fountain pen
Subject
Class
Teacher (male)
Teacher (female)
School
Pupil
Student
school hours
Break
Backpack
17 Review 1.02
17.1 Vocabulary
I
We
You
ich
wir
du
Sie
ihr
Sie
er
sie
es
sie
You All
He
She
It
They
(formal)
(formal)
Have
Singular, ich)
Singular, informal, du)
Person, Plural, wir, sie; 2nd Person, singular & plural,
formal, Sie)
habt (2nd Person, Plural, informal,
hat (3rd Person, singular, er, sie, es
Has
Am
Are
Is
ihr)
Hello!
Hallo!
Servus! (used in Bavaria and Austria)
Moin! or Moin Moin! (used in northern Germany)
Grezi! (used in Switzerland)
Good morning! Guten Morgen! or Morgen!
Good day!
Guten Tag! or Tag!
Good evening! Guten Abend! or N'Abend!
Gr Gott! (used in southern Germany, Austria
Goodbye!
Auf Wiedersehen! or Wiedersehen
Bye!
Tschss! or Tschau! (Ciao from Italy)
Servus! (used in Bavaria, Austria)
Later!
Bis spter! or Bis dann!
Good night! Gute Nacht!
Good
Super!
Great!
Very good!
Bad
Miserable
Gut
Spitze!
Prima!
Sehr gut!
Schlecht
Miserabel
111
Review 1.02
Who
What
Where
When
Why
How
Boy
Girl
Man
Woman
Boys
Girls
Men
Women
Wer
Was
Wo
Wann
Warum
Wie
Der Junge
Das Mdchen
Der Herr
Die Frau
Die Jungen
Die Mdchen
Die Mnner
Die Frauen
Sport(s)
Sport
Interests
Hobbys
Soccer
Fuball
USA Football Football
Volleyball Volleyball
Basketball Basketball
Tennis
Tennis
Baseball
Baseball
9-pin Bowling Kegeln
Chess
Schach
Board Game Das Brettspiel
Game
Das Spiel
Homework
Hausaufgaben
Television Fernsehen
Movie
Der Film, Filme
And
und
But
aber
Or
oder
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
Have
haben
Be
sein
Be Called heien
Play
spielen
Do/Make machen
Read
lesen
Watch
schauen
See
sehen
Work
arbeiten
Write
schreiben
Swim
schwimmen
One
Eins
Two
Zwei
Three
Drei
Four
Vier
Five
Fnf
Six
Sechs
Seven
Sieben
Eight
Acht
Nine
Neun
Ten
Zehn
Eleven
Elf
Twelve
Zwlf
Thirteen
Dreizehn
Fourteen
Vierzehn
Fifteen
Fnfzehn
Sixteen
Sechzehn
Seventeen
Siebzehn
Eighteen
Achtzehn
Nineteen
Neunzehn
112
Vocabulary
Twenty
Zwanzig
Thirty
Dreiig
Forty
Vierzig
Fifty
Fnfzig
Sixty
Sechzig
Seventy
Siebzig
Eighty
Achtzig
Ninety
Neunzig
Hundred
Hundert
Thousand
Tausend
Noon
Mittag
Midnight
Mitternacht
After
Nach
Till
Vor
Quarter
Viertel
Half Before Halb
Quarter Before Dreiviertel
Day
Tag
Today
Heute
Tomorrow
Morgen
Yesterday
Gestern
Early Morning Morgen (use
Morning
Vormittag
Afternoon
Nachmittag
Evening
Abend
Night
Nacht
Monday
Montag
Tuesday
Dienstag
Wednesday
Mittwoch
Thursday
Donnerstag
Friday
Freitag
Saturday
Samstag or Sonnabend
Sunday
Sonntag
January
Januar
Jnner (used in Austria)
February
Februar
March
Mrz
April
April
May
Mai
June
Juni
Juno (in spoken word only)
July
Juli
Julei (in spoken word only)
August
August
September
September
October
Oktober
November
November
December
Dezember
Spring
Frhling
Summer
Sommer
Autumn
Herbst
Winter
Winter
Time
Free Time
Always
Often
Sometimes
Seldom
Never
Only
Die Zeit
Die Freizeit
immer
oft
manchmal
selten
nie
nur
Me
mich
113
Review 1.02
Us
uns
You
dich
You (formal) Sie
You All
euch
Him
ihn
Her
sie
It
es
Them
sie
Appetizers Vorspeisen
Salad
Der Salat
Bread
Das Brot
Breadstick Die Scheibe Brot
Main Dishes Hauptgerichte
Sausage
Die Wurst
Sausages
Die Wrste
Bratwurst
Die Bratwurst
Hot Dog
Das Hot Dog
Pizza
Die Pizza
Pizzas
Die Pizzen
Hamburger
Der Hamburger
Hamburgers Die Hamburger
With
mit (ignore article)
Without
ohne (ignore article)
Tomatoes
Die Tomaten
Lettuce
Der Salat
Cheese
Der Kse
Pickles
Die Gewrzgurken
Onions
Die Zwiebeln
Ketchup
Der Ketchup
Mustard
Der Senf
Chicken
Das Hhnchen
Chickens
Die Hhnchen
Seafood
Die Meeresfrchte (plural)
Fish
Der Fisch
Sides
Die Beilage (singular), die Beilagen (plural)
Soup
Die Suppe
Soups
Die Suppen
Noodle Soup Die Nudelsuppe
French Fries Die Pommes frites (plural)
Fries
Die Fritten (Informal and plural)
Pasta
Die Pasta or Die Nudeln
Potato
Die Kartoel
Potatoes
Die Kartoeln
Corn
Der Mais
Bean
Die Bohne
Beans
Die Bohnen
Desserts
Nachspeisen
Gteau
Die (Sahne-)Torte
Strudel
Der Strudel
Apple strudel Der Apfelstrudel
Cake
Der Kuchen
Piece of Cake Das Stck Kuchen
Pie
Die Pastete
Piece of Pie Das Stck Pastete
Apple Pie
Die Apfelpastete
Ice Cream
Das Eis
Pudding
Der Pudding
Cookie
Der Keks
Cookies
Die Kekse
Fruit
Das Obst
The Meal
Das Essen
Lunch
Das Mittagessen
Dinner
Das Abendessen
Hunger
Der Hunger
Thirst
Der Durst
114
To Eat
essen
To Drink
trinken
To Receive bekommen
To Want
wollen
Would Like mchten
Thank you
Danke
Please & You're Welcome Bitte
Thank you very much
Dankeschn
Thanks a lot
Danke sehr
No problem
Kein Problem!
Chinese Food chinesisches Essen
Japanese Food japanisches Essen
American Food amerikanisches Essen
Mexican Food mexikanisches Essen
Arabic Food arabisches Essen
Italian Food italienisches Essen
Indian Food indisches Essen
French Food franzsiches Essen
Greek Food griechisches Essen
Durch
Fr
Gegen
Ohne
Um
Delicious
Tasty
Juicy
Crunchy
Crispy
Spicy
Stale
Through
For
Against
Without
At, Around
lecker
schmackhaft
saftig
knackig
knusprig
wrzig
fade
fad (used in
Salty
salzig
Sweet
s
Bitter
bitter
Sour
sauer
Creamy
cremig
Hot
hei
Burnt
angebrannt
Cold
kalt
Disgusting schrecklich
To Pay
The Bill
Waiter
Austria)
Zahlen
Die Rechnung
Der Ober
115
Review 1.02
17.2.3 Names
Wir haben das Verb heien gelernt. Erinnern Sie sich?
Bericht!3
17.2.4 Verbs
Wir haben zwei andere Verben konjugiert. Knnen Sie sich daran erinnern?
Bericht!4
17.2.5 Articles
Wir haben die Artikel beim Nominativ gelernt. Knnen Sie sich an sie erinnern?
Bericht!5
17.3 Freizeit
17.3.1 Regulars Verbs
Wir haben die regelmigen Verbende gelernt. Knnen Sie sich an sie erinnern?
Bericht!6
2
3
4
5
6
7
116
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
8.5 on page 28
8.5 on page 28
8.5 on page 28
8.5 on page 28
10 on page 43
9.4 on page 39
Essen
17.3.3 Numbers
Wir haben die Zahlen gelernt. Knnen Sie sich an sie erinnern?
Bericht!8
17.3.4 Time
Wir haben schon Zeit-Wrter gelernt. Knnen Sie sich an diese erinnern?
Bericht!9
17.4 Essen
17.4.1 Accusative Case
Wir hatten schon den Akkusativ-Fall gelernt. Knnen Sie sich an ihn erinnern?
Bericht!10
17.4.3 Kein-Words
Wir haben die Kein-Wrter gelernt. Knnen Sie sich daran erinnern?
Bericht!12
8
9
10
11
12
13
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
9.5 on page 40
10 on page 43
11.5.2 on page 54
11.5 on page 52
11.8 on page 57
11.12 on page 62
117
119
19.1 Dialogue
Read and listen to the following dialogue between mother and daughter: Roswitha and
Anja. Both of them want to decorate for Christmas.
Roswitha
Anja
Roswitha
Anja
Roswitha
Anja
advent
decorate
decoration
advent wreath
coee table
Christmas pyramid
shelf
sill
Little mouse
der Advent
schmcken, dekorieren
die Dekoration, die Deko coll., der Schmuck
der Adventskranz
der Wohnzimmertisch
die Weihnachtspyramide
das Regal
der Fenstersims, die Fensterbank
das Muschen
In Austria Adventkranz
19.2 Es gibt
German
English
121
Es
Es
Es
Es
gibt
gibt
gibt
gibt
Zimt
ein Rentier
Nussknacker
ein paar Ausstecher
There
There
There
There
is
is
are
are
cinnamon
a reindeer
nutcrackers
some cookie cutter
The English words there is and there are are both in German es gibt. When you ask
someone, if there's a snowman, you say Gibt es hier einen Schneemann?. Many
German native speaker put the words gibt and es into gibt's.
122
Frohe Weihnachten!
Frhliche Weihnachten! (used by Santa)
die Adventszeit
der Adventskalender
der Sack
der Stiefel
der Sternsinger
die Christbaumkugel
Weihnachtsgeld
das Weihnachtslied
die Weihnachtskarte
Dativstze
Christmas cracker
Christmas Day Speech
Christmas Eve
Christmas market
Christmas ornament
Christmas present
Christmas spirit
Christmas time
Christmas tree
crib
dining table
do a secret Santa
avour
gift giving
gnome
holly
Jack Frost
list of wishes
mistletoe
North Pole
nutcracker
poinsettia
Santa's Little Helper
sleigh
St. Nicholas
the three Magi
tinsel
tradition
Knallbonbon
die Weihnachtsansprache
der Heiligabend
der Weihnachtsmarkt
Christbaumschmuck, Weihnachtsbaumschmuck
das Weihnachtsgeschenk
die Weihnachtsstimmung
die Weihnachtszeit
der Weihnachtsbaum, der Christbaum
die Krippe
der Esstisch
wichteln
der Duft
die Bescherung
der Wichtel
die Stechpalme
Vterchen Frost
der Wunschzettel
der Mistelzweig
der Nordpol
der Nussknacker
der Weihnachtsstern
Knecht Ruprecht
der Schlitten
St. Nikolaus
die heiligen drei Knige
das Lametta
der Brauch
19.4 Dativstze
The Dativ, also called 3. Fall or Wemfall is in the German language the third object.
Die Kokosmakronen gehren der Anja. - You ask: Wem gehren die Kokosmakronen? - the answer is: Der Anja (gehren die Kokosmakronen).
Lisa schenkt (dem) Bjrn ein Spekulatius - You ask: Wem schenkt Lisa ein
Spekulatius? - the answer is: Dem Bjrn (schenkt Lisa ein Spekulatius).
123
19.5 Weihnachtsessen
das
die
das
die
der
das
die
die
cookie
cookie cutter
rolling pin
vanilla cornets
gingerbread
gingerbread house
coconut macaroon
jammy dodgers, linzer eye
spice nut
stollen
marzipan potato
Christmas goose
Christmas carp
turkey
sausages and potato salad
almond biscuit
pyramid cake
shortcrust
springerle
bethmnnchen typical Frankfurt marzipan biscuits
star-shaped cinnamon biscuit
fruitcake
roast apple
domino a candy that you can eat in advent time
candy cane
hot spiced wine
punch for children
kenkentjch cookies from northern Germany
roasted almonds
Christmas dinner
salt of harts horn
cinnamon
icing powdered sugar
flavour
In the southern part of Germany they have other words for Pltzchen.
So in Swabian they call it Pltzle or Brtle and in Bavaria Platzerl. In Switzerland they
call it Guetsli.
Other names for Nudelholz are Teigrolle, Wellholz, Wlgerholz and Rollholz rare.
In Austria and Bavaria they call it Nudelwalker and in Switzerland Wallholz.
124
Arbeit
Arzt
Geschftsmann
Geschftsfrau
Lehrer
Polizeibeamte
Feuerwehrmann
Schauspieler
Knstler
Schriftsteller
Bankangestellter
Automechaniker
Chemiker
Beamter
Programmierer
Ingenieur
Landwirt
Friseur
Journalist
Rechtsanwalt
Dozent
Krankenpfleger
Rentner
Fotograf
Politiker
Brieftrger
Professor
Verkufer
Sekretr
Student
Taxifahrer
Kellner
125
Reinigung
Kochen
Hausaufgaben
Wscherei
Aufgaben
20.2 Plans
20.2.1 Common Phases
Ich habe Plne...
I have plans...
Ich habe Plne mit...
I have plans with...
20.3 Places To Go
20.3.1 Vocabulary
Germany Deutschland
Hamburg
Berlin
Frankfurt
Cologne
Munich
Hamburg
Berlin
Frankfurt
Kln
Mnchen
126
21.1 Dialoge
Lukas calls his friend Nadja after he sees the weather forecast.
Lukas
Nadja
Lukas
Nadja
Lukas
Nadja
Lukas
Nadja
Lukas
Nadja
Lukas
21.2 Weather
21.2.1 Vocabulary
informal for: bad weather
weather forecast
sun
sunny with some clouds
rainbow
starlit
fog
frost
wind
storm
127
thunderstorm
thunder
lightning
cloud
overcast
precipitation
rain
rain shower
rainy
(to) rain cats and dogs
drizzle
snow
snow falling
snowy
sleet
low snow falling
hail
graupel
black ice
das Gewitter*
das Unwetter
der Donner*
der Blitz*
die Wolke*
bedeckt*
der Niederschlag
der Regen*
der Regenschauer*
regnerisch*
in Strmen regnen
schtten
der Niesel*
der Schnee*
der Schneefall*
verschneit*
der Schneeregen*
der Schniesel (in some regions of Germany)
der Hagel*
der Graupel*
das Glatteis*
You will need to know each expression with an asterisk (*) after it. The others, of course,
would be useful to know for the weather forecast or when someone talks with you about
weather. But you aren't forced to know Schniesel. Because many people doesn't know this
word.
128
Transportation
Bad weather is today expected. Please take your umbrella with you!
Wie viel Grad zeigt das Thermometer an?
How much degrees says the thermometer?
Das Thermometer zeigt 15 Grad (Celcius) an.
The thermometer says 15 degrees (Celsius).
Das Thermometer zeigt minus 15 Grad (Celcius)* an.
The thermometer says minus 15 degrees (Celsius).
You can also say Das Thermometer zeigt 15 Grad minus an.
21.3 Transportation
21.3.1 Vocabulary
das
der
das
das
das
der
die
die
die
der
der
der
die
der
die
die
der
das
der
der
das
das
die
der
Auto
Bus
Fahrrad
Motorrad
Mofa
Lastwagen
Strae
Landstrae
Autobahn
Stadtbus
Linienbus
Reisebus
Bushaltestelle
Zug
Stadtbahn
Straenbahn
Bahnhof
Flugzeug
Helikopter
Flughafen
Boot
Schiff
Fhre
Hafen
car
bus
bike
motor-cycle
moped
truck
road
highway
motorway
city bus
urban bus
coach
bus stop
train
city railway
tramway
trainstation
airplane
helicopter
airport
boat
ship
ferry
harbor
129
22 Review 1.03
22.1 Vocabulary
Babywear
Children's Wear
Clearance Sale
Closed
Clothing
Computer Section
Cosmetics
Customer
Customer Service
Electrical Appliance
Escalator
Fashion
Furniture
Gift
Good Value (Adj.)
Groceries
Jewellery
Leather Goods
Open
Opening Hours
Present
Reduced
Sales Receipt
Souvenir
Special Offer
Sports Goods
Stationery
Summer Sale
Video Store
Winter Sale
Department Store
Retail Store
The Mall
Boutique
Store
Manager
Employee
Sales Clerk
Cashier
Dressing Room
Men's Section
Women's Section
First Floor
Menswear
Second Floor
SSV)
WSV)
Warenhaus
Einzelhandelsgeschft
Einkaufszentrum
Boutique
Geschft
Manager
Angestellter
Verkufer
Kassierer
Umkleidekabine
Mnnerabteilung
Frauenabteilung
Erstes Stockwerk
Mnnerkleidung
Zweiter Stock
131
Review 1.03
Womenswear
Third Floor
Kids Section
Fourth Floor
Electronics
Kitchenware
Fifth Floor
Lighting
Bedding
Toys
Six Floor
Food
Frauenkleidung
Dritte Stock
Kinderabteilung
Vierter Stock
Elektronik
Kchenbedarf
Fnfter Stock
Beleuchtung
Bettwsche
Spielwaren
Sechster Stock
Lebensmittel
Electronics
Television
Digital Camera
Telephone
Cell phone
Computer
Speakers
DVDs
CDs
DVD Player
CD Player
Bedding
Blankets
Pillow
Pillow Case
Sheets
Bed Skirt
Elektronik
Fernsehen
Digitalkamera
Telefon
Mobiltelefon, Handy
Computer, Rechner
Lautsprecher
DVDs
CDs
DVD-Player
CD-Player
Bettwsche
Decken
Kopfkissen
Kopfkissenbezug
Bltter
Bett-Rock
Price
Note
Coin
1 Euro Coin
2 Euro Coin
5 Euro Note
10 Euro Note
100 Euro Note
1 Cent Coin
2 Cent Coin
5 Cent Coin
10 Cent Coin
20 Cent Coin
50 Cent Coin
Preis
Der Schein
Die Mnze
Das Eurostck
Das Zweieurostck
Der Fnfeuroschein
Der Zehneuroschein
Der Hunderteuroschein
Das Centstck
Das Zweicentstck
Das Fnfcentstck
Das Zehncentstck
Das Zwanzigcentstck
Das Fnfzigcentstck
Skirt
Pullover
Scarf
Coat
Shirt
Sweater
Necktie
Jacket
Pants
Hat
Shoe
Sock
Glove
Blouse
Der
Der
Das
Der
Das
Der
Der
Die
Die
Der
Der
Die
Der
Die
Rock
Pullover
Tuch
Mantel
Hemd
Pullover
Schlips
Jacke
Hose
Hut
Schuh
Socke
Handschuh
Bluse
Size
Color
Cotton
Leather
Rayon
Die
Die
Die
Das
Die
Gre
Farbe
Baumwolle
Leder
Kuntseide
132
Vocabulary
Small
Medium
Large
Extra-Large
Klein
Mittel
Gro
Extragro
Cheap
Expensive
Pretty
Ugly
Soft
New
Broad
Wide
Tight
Comfortable
Billig
Teuer
Schn
Hsslich
Weich
Neu
Breit
Weit
Eng
Bequem
Red
Blue
Green
Orange
Violet
Yellow
Brown
Indigo
Gray
Black
White
Rot
Blau
Grn
Orange
Veilchen
Gelb
Braun
Indigo
Grau
Schwarz
Wei
To
To
To
To
To
To
Aussehen
Anprobieren
Anziehen
Nehmen
Kaufen
Anhaben
Tragen
Look
Try On
Put On
Take
Buy
Have On/Wear
Sohn
Tochter
Vater
Mutter
Grovater
Gromutter
Opa
Oma
Schwester
Bruder
Geschwister
Enkel
Enkelin
Frau
Mann
Schwiegervater
Schwiegertochter
Schwager
Schwgerin
Schwiegermutter
Schwiegersohn
Onkel
Tante
Geschenk
Son
Daughter
Father
Mother
Grandfather
Grandmother
Grandpa
Grandma
Sister
Brother
Brothers & Sisters
Grandson
Granddaughter
Wife
Husband
Father-in-Law
Daughter-in-Law
Brother-in-Law
Sister-in-Law
Mother-in-Law
Son-in-Law
Uncle
Aunt
Present
Nimmt
Lesen
Schreiben
Studieren
Lernen
To
To
To
To
To
Take Away
Read
Write
Study
Study
133
Review 1.03
Zeichnen
To Paint
Deutsch
Englisch
Russisch
Franzsisch
Latein
Mathematik
Sport
Kunst or Zeichnen
Musik
Geschichte
Biologie
Geografie
Religion
Chemie
Physik
Informatik
German
English
Russian
French
Latin
Mathematics
PE or Gym
Arts
Music
History
Biology
Geography
RE or Religion
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
der
der
der
das
die
der
die
die
der
der
die
die
die
Eraser/Rubber
Pencil
Pen
Subject
Class
Teacher (male)
Teacher (female)
School
Student (High/Secondary School
Student (College/University)
Lesson
Break
Backpack
134
Radiergummi
Bleistift
Kuli/Kugelschreiber
Fach
Klasse
Lehrer
Lehrerin
Schule
Schler
Student
Stunde/Schulstunde
Pause
Schultasche
and Lower)
135
137
139
das Zimmer
das Wohnzimmer
das Esszimmer
die Kche
das Schlafzimmer
das Badezimmer
der Flur
der Boden
die Decke
die Tr
die Haustr
das Fenster
die Wand
das Dach
die Treppe
die Zentralheizung
der Teppich
der Tisch
der Stuhl
der Sessel
das Sofa
der Schrank
das Bett
141
142
der Heizkrper
der Herd
der Khlschrank
die Waschmaschine
die Badewanne
der Fernsehapparat
27 Review 1.04
27.1 Vocabulary
das
das
der
die
die
die
die
das
das
der
der
der
der
Spiel
Videospiel
Spa
Feier
Party
Musik
Torte
Fass
Bier
Schnaps
Wein
Weiwein
Rotwein
Game
Video Game
Fun
Party*
Party
Music
Cake
Keg
Beer
Hard Liquor
Wine
White Wine
Red Wine
Feiern
To Party
Trinken
Drinking
Saufen
To Get Drunk
Erbrechen / sich bergeben To Throw Up
Kotzen
To Puke (slang)
Tanzen
To Dance
der Geburtstag
Birthday
Weihnachten
Christmas
Ostern
Easter
das Jubilum
Anniversary
das Wasser
Water
Work
Doctor
Buniness Man
Buniness Woman
Teacher
Police Ocer
Fireman
Actor
Artist
Author
Bank Clerk
Car Mechanic
Chemist
Civil Servant
Engineer
Farmer
Hairdresser
Journalist
Lawyer
Lecturer
Arbeit
der Arzt
der Geschftsmann
die Geschftsfrau
der Lehrer
der Polizeibeamte
der Feuerwehrmann
der Schauspieler
der Knstler
der Schriftsteller
Bankangestellter
der Automechaniker
der Chemiker
Beamter
der Ingenieur
der Landwirt
der Friseur
der Journalist
der Rechtsanwalt
der Dozent
143
Review 1.04
Nurse
Pensioner
Photographer
Politician
Postman
Professor
Salesperson
Secretary
Student
Taxi Driver
Waiter
Germany
Humburg
Berlin
Frankfurt
Colonge
Munich
Weather
Rain
Snow
Snow Showers
Showers
Thunder
Storm
Thunderstorm
Cloudy
Overcast
Hail
Drizzle
Thaw
Frost
Car
Train
Trainstation
Airplane
Boat
Highway
Road
144
der Krankenpeger
der Rentner
der Fotograf
der Politiker
der Brieftrger
der Professor
der Verkufer
der Sekretr
der Student
der Taxifahrer
der Kellner
Deutschland
Hamburg
Berlin
Frankfurt
Kln
Mnchen
das Wetter
der Regen
der Schnee
Schneesch
Schauer
Donner
der Sturm
das Gewitter
Bewlkt
Bedeckt
der Hagel
Nieseln
Tauen
der Frost
das Auto
der Zug
der Bahnhof
das Flugzeug
das Boot
die Landstrae
die Strae
145
29 Contents
#Section 2.01 Salzburg, Austria1
#Lesson 2.01 - Einfache Gesprche unter Freunden2
#Lesson 2.02 - Fremde und Freunde3
#Lesson 2.03 - Die Zahlen4
#Lesson 2.04 - Eine Geschichte ber Zrich5
#Review 2.016
#Section 2.02 Zrich, Switzerland7
#Lesson 2.05 - Die Wohnung8
#Lesson 2.06 - Mathematik9
#Lesson 2.07 - Mein, Dein, und Sein10
#Lesson 2.08 - Einkaufen gehen11
#Review 2.0212
#Section 2.03 Hannover, Germany13
#Lesson 2.09 - Verbtempus und Wortstellung14
#Lesson 2.10 - Undeveloped15
#Lesson 2.11 - Undeveloped16
#Lesson 2.12 - Undeveloped17
#Review 2.0318
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
147
149
151
153
155
157
35 Review 2.01
159
161
163
165
167
169
41 Review 2.02
171
173
175
177
179
181
47 Review 2.03
183
185
49 Contents
#Section 3.01 Bonn, Germany1
#Lesson 3.01 - Markus2
#Lesson 3.02 - Gesprche unter Geschftsmnnern3
#Lesson 3.03 - Mach dir keine Sorgen!4
#Section 3.02 Innsbruck, Austria5
#Lesson 3.04 - Die Geschftsleute6
#Lesson 3.05 - Der Englnder in sterreich7
#Lesson 3.06 - Undeveloped8
#Section 3.03 Bavaria, Germany9
#Lesson 3.07 - Undeveloped10
#Lesson 3.08 - Undeveloped11
#Lesson 3.09 - Undeveloped12
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
187
189
191
193
195
197
rmelkanaltunnel
Arbeit
Bibliothek
Buchhaltung
Bro
Donnerstag
199
die
der
der
der
das
die
das
das
die
das
Geschftsbibliothek
Montag
Name
Schnellzug
Sehen
Versammlung
Wien
Wiedersehen
Woche
Zrich
alles klar
all right, everything clear
am Montag
on Monday
dann wenn
at such time when
Darf ich... ?
May I... ?
Es freut mich sehr
It gives me pleasure
Guten Morgen!
Good morning!
Ja, gewiss
certainly, of course
vor Ende der Woche
before the end of the week
Wiener Bro
Vienna branch oce
abhalten
hold
abschlieen
complete
ankommen (kam an,
angekommen)
arrive
fahren
ride
geben
give
kennen lernen
meet, make acquaintance
mssen
must
reisen
travel
sehen
see, look
tun
do, accomplish
sich vorstellen
introduce
werden
will
wrde
would
bitte
da
durch
endlich
gestern
nach
natrlich
mich
mit
schnell
sofort
wieder
(greeting)
(aux.)
please
there
through, by means of
finally
yesterday
to, towards
of course
myself (reexive)
with
fast, quick, rapid
directly, forthwith
again, once again
200
Singular
1st person
2nd person
3rd person
mich
dich (Sie*)
ihn, sie, es
Plural
me
you
him, her, it
uns
euch (Sie*)
sie (all genders)
us
you
them
*Polite form.
The accusative case is that of the object of a verb. Only transitive verbs take direct objects.
The pronoun (and noun in two cases) object in each of these sentences is underlined in
the German and the English:
Knnen Sie mich verstehen?
Can you understand me?
Ich kann Sie verstehen.
I can understand you.
Ich kann sie verstehen
I can understand (her or them).
Ich kann ihn dir zurck kicken! I can kick it back to you!
Note the order of the pronouns in this last sentence. If the direct object (here: ihn) is a
personal pronoun, it precedes the dative (dir); if it were a noun, the dative would precede
it, as in these sentences:
Here, I kick the ball to you.
Hier, ich kicke dir den Ball zu.
Darf ich Ihnen meine Freundin vorstellen? May I introduce my friend to you?
Other uses of the accusative case in German will be explored in future lessons. Tables of
the personal pronouns in all cases are summarized in Pronoun Tables2 .
mir
dir (Ihnen*)
ihm, ihr, ihm
Plural
me
you
him, her,
uns
euch (Ihnen*)
ihnen (all genders)
us
you
them
it
*Polite form.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FAppendix%203
201
This last sentence is an example from Gesprch 1-2 using the polite form of 'you'. Whether
singular or plural must be established by context. This next sentence translates with ihnen
as 'them':
Wie geht es ihnen?
The meaning of ihnen (or Ihnen) would have to come from context in a conversation.
Another use of the dative case in German is after these prepositions: aus, bei, mit,
nach, seit, von, zu. You will be introduced to the meanings of these prepositions over
many future lessons rather than all at once, because some have many meanings in English.
Indeed, because each language associates specic prepositions with many common sayings
(and these often do not correspond in German and English), these "little" words can be
troublesome for students. Nonetheless, you should memorize now the list of prepositions
above to always remember their association with the dative case. Tables of the pronouns
in all cases are summarized in Appendix 23 .
Word order in a German sentence with an indirect object depends upon whether that
direct object is a pronoun or a noun. If the direct object is a noun, the dative precedes the
accusative; if the direct object is a personal pronoun, the accusative precedes the dative:
Ich
Ich
Ich
Ich
gebe
gebe
gebe
gebe
202
I
I
I
I
give
give
give
give
Lektion Fnf
Figure 8
203
Republik sterreich Wenn er auf den Kontinent fhrt, wandert Herr Standish gern. Heute
frh fhrt er in die Stadt St. Plten in Niedersterreich. Er spricht mit einer fremden Frau:
56.2 Vokabeln 5A
das Abendessen
[das] sterreich
die Ecke
das Frhstck
das Hotel
der Kilometer
die Kche
der Kontinent
[das] Niedersterreich
das Rathaus
das Restaurant
die Stadt
Bitte sehr
Entschuldigen Sie
You're welcome
Pardon me, excuse me
204
Andere Wrter 4A
Es gibt dort...
Gibt es...?
Guten Tag
immer geradeaus
knnen Sie
Wie bitte?
There is there...
Is there..?
good day (parting)
straight on ahead
could you (polite form)
Pardon me? (polite "come again?")
empfehlen
fahren
kommen
wandern
sagen
sprechen
recommend
travel
come, go, get
wander
say, tell
speak
anderer, andere,
besonders
bitte
das
dann
darin
ein
eins
fremd
gern
gleich
heute frh
hier
ich
links
neben
rechts
ungefhr
von
wie
wo
zu
anderes
other
especially
please
that
then
therein
a (indefinite article)
one (cardinal number)
unknown
gladly
just, right (correct), right here, same
this morning
here (in this place)
I (personal pronoun)
left (direction)
next to
right (direction)
approximately
of (Rathaus von St. Plten = St. Polten City Hall)
how (interrogative)
where (interrogative)
to (zum = contraction of zu dem)
Bahnhof
Flughafen
Polizeiwache
Post
genau
heute
train station
airport
police station
post office
exact(ly)
today
205
Figure 10
Niedersterreich ist sowohl chenmig als auch nach Einwohnern das grte der neun
sterreichischen Bundeslnder. Sankt Plten ist die Landeshauptstadt von Niedersterreich.
Der Name St. Plten geht auf den heiligen Hippolytos zurck, nach dem die Stadt benannt
wurde.
Die Altstadt bendet sich dort, wo vom 2. bis zum 4. Jahrhundert die Rmerstadt Aelium
Cetium stand. 799 wurde der Ort als "Treisma" erwhnt. Das Marktrecht erhielt St. Plten um 1050, zur Stadt erhoben wurde es 1159. Bis 1494 stand St. Plten im Besitz des
Bistums Passau, dann wurde es landesfrstliches Eigentum. Bereits 771 ndet sich ein
Benediktinerkloster, ab 1081 gab es Augustiner-Chorherren, 1784 wurde deren Kollegiatsstift aufgehoben, das Gebude dient seit 1785 als Bischofssitz. Zur Landeshauptstadt von
Niedersterreich wurde St. Plten mit Landtagsbeschluss vom 10. Juli 1986, seit 1997 ist
es Sitz der Niedersterreichischen Landesregierung.
206
Figure 11
56.4.1 Vokabeln 5B
Die
Der
Der
Das
Der
Die
Die
Das
Die
Das
Die
Das
Das
Das
Die
Die
Der
Das
Der
Der
Die
Der
Altstadt
Augustiner
Besitz
Bistum
Bischofssitz
Bundeslnder
Chorherren
Eigentum
Einwohner
Gebude
Geschichte
Jahrhundert
Kloster
Kollegiatsstift
Landeshauptstadt
Landesregierung
Landtagsbeschluss
Marktrecht
Name
Ort
Rmerstadt
Sitz
old town
Augustinian
possession, holding
diocese
bishop's see (a seat of a bishop's authority)
federal states
men's choir
proprietorship
inhabitants
premises
history
century
monastery, friary
monastery college
regional or state capital city
provincial (state) government
day of jurisdictional reorganization
right to hold markets
name
place, spot, city
Roman town
official place
207
Bistum Passau
sowohl... als auch
zurck auf
ab
auf
bereits
bis
flchenmig
surface
heilig
landesfrstlich
nach
um
from
up
already
until, by, up to
(no direct translation) when measured in
holy
baronial or princely (holdings)
in terms of
around
(* one short form of annden: ndet sich (an); in colloquial language you can cut the "an";
but in THIS special case it is the short form of "(be)ndet sich (dort)")
Pronunciation Guide1 >>
Read more about St. Plten2 at the German Wikipedia (source of article above).
1
2
208
209
211
213
215
217
219
63 Contents
#Section 01 Kiel, Germany1
#Section 02 Schaan, Liechtenstein2
#Section 03 Schahausen, Switzerland3
----
1
2
3
221
223
225
66 Section 03 Schahausen,
Switzerland
----
227
229
68 GRAMMAR
231
69 Contents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
70 on page 235
56.4.1 on page 207
56.4.1 on page 207
56.4.1 on page 207
56.4.1 on page 207
56.4.1 on page 207
56.4.1 on page 207
233
Attributive adjectives precede the noun that they are describing, and are always declined.
Learning the adjective endings is a central part to the study of German. The adjective
endings are frequently one of the hardest topics for new students to learn. It is best to
commit the declension tables to memory, while attempting to speak independently. Proper
use of adjective endings, especially in speaking, will come with repeated use. They are
described in the next part of this chapter.
Neuter
Feminine
Plural
235
Declension
Masculine
-er
-en
-em
-en
Neuter
-es
-es
-em
-en
Feminine
-e
-e
-er
-er
Plural
-e
-e
-en
-er
The strong adjective endings are nearly the same as the der-word endings, with the exceptions of masculine and neuter adjectives in the genitive case (marked in bold).
Figure 12
Neuter
-e
-e
-en
-en
Feminine
-e
-e
-en
-en
Plural
-en
-en
-en
-en
Make note of the region, Oklahoma, in the nominative and accusitive cases, for weak
endings.
The use of a weak or a strong adjective ending depends on what precedes it:
Choice of Adjective Ending
Preceding Article
Denite Article, der-words
Indenite Article, ein-words
No article
Choice of Ending
Weak Ending
Within Oklahoma, Strong Ending
Outside Oklahoma, Weak Ending
Strong Ending
The principle guiding adjective endings is that a noun, when possible, should have a primary
case ending. Denite articles and der-words always provide a primary case ending. Indenite
236
Adjective Endings
articles and ein-words provide primary case endings outside of Oklahoma. Sometimes nouns
have no article, in which case adjectives provide the primary case ending.
Plural
the red apples
die roten pfel
den roten pfeln
der roten pfel
Adjectives following a denite article or der-word always have a weak ending. Within
Oklahoma, that is "-e", and outside of Oklahoma, that is "-en". Also dies.., jed.., manch..,
welch.., solch.. and all.. get the same ending as in the table above.
Adjective Declension following an Indenite Article or ein-word
Case
Masculine
Neuter
Feminine
a large man
a small book
a quiet cat
Nominative
ein groer Mann
ein kleines Buch
eine ruhige Katze
Accusative
einen groen
Mann
Dative
einem groen
einem kleinen
einer ruhigen Katze
Mann
Buch
Genitive
eines groen
eines kleinen
Mannes
Buches
Plural
no red apples
keine roten pfel
keinen roten
pfeln
keiner roten pfel
Note how, within Oklahoma, adjectives take strong endings, and outside Oklahoma, they
take weak endings. This is because indenite articles provide primary endings only outside
of Oklahoma. Also mein.., dein.., sein.., ihr.., unser.., euer.. and Ihr.. get the same ending
as in the table above.
Adjective Declension with no preceding article
Case
Masculine
Neuter
Feminine
Nominative
groer Mann
kleines Buch
ruhige Katze
Accusative
groen Mann
Dative
groem Mann
kleinem Buch
ruhiger Katze
Genitive
groen Mannes
kleinen Buches
Plural
rote pfel
roten pfeln
roter pfel
Forms of nouns without articles are rare compared to those with denite and indenite
articles; however, one must still know the strong declension. Note that the strong adjective
237
70.3 Adverbs
Adverbs based on adjectives are one of the simplest parts of German grammar. Any
adjective can be used as an adverb simply by placing its uninected form within the
sentence, usually towards the end.
Das Ehepaar ging gestern frhlich spazieren.
(The married couple went for a walk joyfully yesterday.)
Adverbs can also be based on participles (past and present). These are less common.
Er betrachtete mich bedrohlich. (He looked at me threateningly.)
Some adverbs are formed by adding -weise to adjectives and nouns in the plural form, and
mean "regarding", "with respect to", or "-wise" in English. Construction of new adverbs
of this sort is usually frowned upon.
In both English and German, prepositions and particles derived from prepositions are
treated as adverbs. In many cases, these prepositional adverbs are associated with specic verbs.
238
Adverbs
In the rst two examples, the italicized prepositions are used as adverbs of motion; in the
rst example, the word "out" indicates the direction "out of the apartment"; in the second
case, "over" not only means means the direction "towards", but also implies visitation of a
residence.
The third and fourth examples correspond to separable-prex verbs in German. The word
"up" is integral to the verb, which would have a dierent meaning without the adverb.
"To give up", whose innitive in German would be "to up-give", means "to quit", in sharp
contrast to "to give". In the fourth example, it is not even possible to "look someone",
whereas it is possible to "look someone up," or "look a candidate's resume over". (English
even has inseparable prepositional prex verbs; compare "to look s.o. over" to "to overlook
s.o." Many of these verbs have been replaced by verbs based on Latin and Greek.)
The adverbs in the fth example correspond to da-, wo-, hin- and her- compounds in
German. Such compounds are often used in legal texts in English. In such compounds, the
object of the preposition is replaced with the words "there" or "here", compounded with
the preposition. "Therein" simply means "in it".
The German system of adverbs based on prepositions is considerably more rigorous, and
forms the basis of a large part of the language's morphology. "To catch on" means "to
begin" in English; In German, the primary word for "to begin" is literally "to catch on"
(anfangen), from which the equivalent noun, der Anfang (the beginning) is derived. A
remnant of this in English can be found when describe a child's upbringing.
As in English, prepositional adverbs in German to varying degrees alter the meaning of
their associated verb.
Separable-prex verbs. This topic is better explored in the chapter on verbs. Separable
prexes are themselves adverbs. As in English, many of them are integral to the meaning
of the verb. Fangen means "to catch," whereas anfangen means "to begin".
Most prepositional adverbs are treated as part of the root word in the innitive, and are
used as such in the construction of participles. However, not all possible separable-prex
verbs are lexical; "vorbeikommen" (to come over), "vorbeibringen" (to bring over), and so
on, may not all be listed in a dictionary. It is better to learn "vorbei" as an adverb implying
visitation.
The German prex in is of note. It has two adverbial forms. As in it describes location;
when describing movement, it becomes ein. Thus, for example, darin means "in there",
whereas darein means "in(to) there". Another example is the word, einleiten, to introduce.
Hin- and her-. Prepositional adverbs of motion are usually based on hin-, implying
motion or direction away from the speaker, and her-, implying motion or direction towards
the speaker. Hin and her are themselves stand-alone adverbs meaning the same thing,
and describe less-specic motion or direction. (One example in which hin is an integral
separable prex is the verb hinrichten, which means "to execute.) Not all verbs formed
from hin- and her- compounds are lexical. Some examples of hin- and her- compounds are:
herab (down, down from)
hinein (in, inside)
hinaus (out, out of, onto)
239
Mastery of hin- and her- requires considerable eort from the student.
Da- compounds are also adverbs, corresponding to "there-" compounds in English. They
replace specic prepositional objects. Although are used principally in legal texts and
therefore sound formal in English, they are often employed in written and spoken German
and are convenient replacements for long and complicated prepositional phrases. Their
comprehension and active use are essential in German. Da- compounds are formed by
adding da- before the preposition, with an "r" inserted before prepositions starting with a
vowel. There are exceptions to this, and da- compounds are given a fuller treatment in the
chapter on prepositions.
Hier- and dort- compounds also exist in German, though they are used less frequently. As
in English, they are considered formal, and are used primarily in academic and legal texts.
They are best memorized as vocabulary.
hierhin und dorthin - hither and thither
1
2
240
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A9rbios
71 Articles
241
72 Nouns
72.1 What Is a Noun?
A word that can be used to refer to a person, place, thing, quality, or idea; part of speech.
It can serve as the subject or object of a verb. For example a table or a computer. Nouns
start with a capital letter in written language.
72.2 Plurals
German, unlike English, has more than one way to make nouns plural, and plural form, like
gender, must be memorized with every noun.
There are twelve dierent ways to form plurals in German. They are formed by axes
at the end of the word, and the umlaut of the vowel of the stem. They are - (changing
nothing); -; -e; -e; -n; -n; -en; -en; -er; -er; -nen (to feminine sux -in); -s (mainly with
English loan-words); adding "foreign" endings (mainly Latin words); and changing suxes
(mainly Latin words).
When German nouns are used in the plural, their gender becomes irrelevant. The plural
can almost be thought of as a gender on its own. In the plural, the denite article is always
"die" when using the nominative and accusative cases.
When using the dative case, "den" is the denite article of all plurals. All plurals not ending
in -n or -s ax an -n.
The denite article of the plural in the genitive case is "der".
Examples
Nominative: Die alten Mnnerspielen Schach. The old men are playing chess.
Accusative: Ich sah die alten Mnnerbeim Schachspielen. I saw the old men as they
played chess.
Dative: Ich spielte mit den alten MnnernSchach. I played chess with the old men.
Genitive: Das Schachspiel der alten Mnnerwar nicht sehr spannend. The old
men's chess game was not very exciting.
72.2.1 Suxes
Although gender and plural form are often arbitrary, there exist certain suxes whose
gender and plural form are regular. They are mainly feminine.
243
Nouns
-ung, -heit, -keit, -schaft, -ion, and -tt
These are all feminine endings, which are pluralized by -en.
Diskussion(en)
Discussion(s)
Universtt(en)
University(ies)
-unft
This endings is feminine and is pluralized by changing the stem vowel and adding -e
Unterkunft
Lodging
Unterknfte
Lodgings
-ik
This ending often doesn't have a plural. When it does however, you add -en
Technik(en)
Technique(s)
Other
When verb innitives transform into nouns, they do not have a plural form.
das Sprechen
Language
Many masculine nouns are formed by verbal stems without a sux. Many of these receive
an umlaut in their plural form.
72.3 Gender
German, like many other languages, gives each noun a gender: Masculine, Feminine, and
Neuter. Plural nouns also act dierently not only with the verb of the sentence, but the
article preceding it.
The way any particular word is classied may not be logical.
Examples:
das Mdchen
die Person
244
Gender
However, not all German Nouns are randomly allocated a gender. The following notes will
apply to most nouns but not all.
A note on Mdchen:
This is derived from the diminutive form of Maid (old, rarely used) - Maidchen. Grammatically it is neuter, but when referenced, nowadays the logical feminine gender takes over:
Das Mdchen und ihr Hund. (Das Mdchen und sein Hund would be used in German slang
but is rare and shouldn't be used.)
72.3.1 Masculine
There are far more masculine nouns than of either of the other genders. The masculine
nominative denite article is der.
z.B.
z.B.
z.B.
z.B.
z.B.
z.B.
z.B.
z.B.
der
der
der
der
der
der
der
der
Montag
Morgen
August
Sommer
Mann, der Knig
Lwe, der Hahn, der Ochse
Wein, der Likr, der Alkohol, der Champagner
Wagen, der Opel, der Mercedes, der BMW
* With, of course, the exception of die Person which remains feminine even when talking
about a man.
** However, it is das Bier, die Spirituose (because of the ending "-ose"), das Pils
(because it is a beer), das Methanol (because it is a scientic term of a substance)
*** Excepting "das Auto".
Exceptions:
245
Nouns
neuter: Recycling, Restaurant, Labor
The following groups of nouns are usually (but not always) masculine
Nouns ending in -el:
der Vogel
Nouns ending in -er:
der Hamster
Nouns ending in -en:
der Kuchen (but not innitives used as nouns. They are
neuter: das Rauchen, das Lachen)
Examples:
Baum, Traum, Schaum, Raum, Saum, Flaum
Nouns ending in -ang:
Examples:
Drang, Fang, Gang, Hang, Klang, Rang, Anfang, Empfang, Gesang, Tang
Nouns ending in -und:
Examples:
Bund, Grund, Schund, Hund, Fund, Schwund, Schlund, Mund
Exceptions:
neuter: Pfund
Nouns ending in -all:
Examples:
Ball, Fall, Krawall, Drall, Hall, Wall, Aufprall, Kristall, Knall, Schall, Zufall, Abfall, Vorfall,
Schwall
Exceptions:
neuter: All, Metall, Intervall
feminine: Nachtigall
246
Gender
72.3.3 Feminine
The feminine Gender article is die. It is used in the nominative and accusative singular
case. It is also used to indicate nominative and accusative plural for nouns of any gender.
e.g. die Katze Feminine
or
die Katzen feminine plural
die Mnner - masculine plural
die Mdchen - neuter plural
Semantic Groups
Female persons and animals are usually feminine (very few exceptions).
Examples:
die Frau (woman)
die Schwester (sister)
die Mutter (mother)
To change a male designation to feminine, you often use the ending -in.
der
der
der
der
der
Exceptions
das Mdchen (girl)
das Kind (child)
das Frulein (old fashioned for Miss)
Buche (beech)
Eiche (oak)
Rose (rose)
Tulpe (tulip)
Nelke (carnation)
Exceptions:
247
Nouns
Exceptions
* das Ei (egg) has nothing to do with the ending -ei.
Das Ei is neuter, including all words derived from:
z.B. das Spiegelei, das Rhrei, das Vogelei (dierent types of eggs)
* der Papagei (parrot)
Foreign words: Words with the endings given below are always stressed on the last syllable.
-enz: die Intelligenz (intelligence), die Konsequenz (consequence)
-ie: die Philosophie (philosophy), die Melodie (melody)
-ik: die Musik (music), die Politik (politics)
-ion: die Nation, die Qualikation (qualication)
-ur: die Kultur (culture)
-tt:
Examples:
Universitt, Majestt, Lokalitt, Piett, Integritt, Qualitt, Aktivitt,
Prioritt, Nationalitt, Kapazitt
-age:
Examples:
Garage, Montage, Etage, Spionage, Persiage, Blamage
248
Gender
Exceptions:
semantic reasons: der Junge (boy), der Franzose (French man), der Lwe (Lion)
others: der Kse (cheese)
72.3.4 Neuter
The neutral Gender article is das for the nominative and accusative case.
Semantic Groups
names of colors: das Blau, das Rot, das Gelb, das Hellgrn, das Dunkelbraun
Words that end with -em and are stressed on the last syllable:
Examples:
Problem, Theorem, System, Extrem
Foreign words that end with -ett and are stressed on the last syllable:
Examples:
Tablett, Etikett, Korsett, Parkett, Kabarett, Ballett
249
Nouns
Examples:
Thema, Trauma, Drama, Dilemma, Prisma, Schema, Koma, Klima, Komma, Karma, Lama,
Dogma, Paradigma
Exceptions:
feminine: Firma
Words that end with -o:
Examples:
Auto, Radio, Video, Kino, Kilo, Bro, Sakko, Solo, Storno, Bistro, Manko, Banjo, Tempo,
Motto, Fresko, Embargo, Esperanto, Studio, Ghetto, Foto, Echo, Piano, Cello, Kasino
Exceptions:
masculine: Tango, Fango, Espresso, Embryo
Foreign words that end with -om:
Examples:
Syndrom, Palindrom, Phantom, Polynom, Binom, Monom, Atom, Axiom, Genom, Symptom, Diplom, Kondom, Chromosom
Words With Certain Beginnings
Nouns that begin with Ge- are often neuter.
250
Contents
Nouns Derived From Certain Verbclasses
Verbs used as noun (roughly corresponding to the gerund)
das Rauchen (Smoking), das Lesen (Reading)
m, f, and n.
m: masculine;
f: feminine;
n: neuter.
The abbreviations of this type are usually given after the noun.
m, w, and s.
m: mnnlich, masculine;
w: weiblich, feminine;
s: schlich, neuter.
The abbreviations of this type are usually given after the noun.
72.4 Contents
/Adjectival Nouns/1
/Weak Nouns/2
/Mixed Nouns/3
1
2
3
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251
73 Gender
253
74 Plurals
255
75 Adjectival Nouns
257
76 Weak Nouns
259
77 Mixed Nouns
261
78 Pronouns
263
264
They
You (formal - singular or plural)
Singular
I
You (informal singular)
He
It
She
Plural
We (us)
You (informal plural)
sie
Sie
uns
euch
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
mich
dich
ihn
es
sie
Accusative
ich
du
er
es
sie
Nominative
ihnen
Ihnen
uns
euch
mir
dir
ihm
ihm
ihr
Dative
ihrer
Ihrer
unser
euer
meiner
deiner
seiner
seiner
ihrer
Genitive
meindeinseinseinihr-
Possessive Pronoun
Pronouns
Contents
Note: The possessive is not a case of the personal pronoun, rather it's a pronoun itself.
This table shows the possessive pronoun's stem, which is declined as an ein-word (like the
indenite article).
The genitive case indicates possession or association, and is equivalent to, and replaces, the
English word "of". "Des" and "der" (do not confuse with masculine singular nominative)
mean "of the"; "eines" and "einer" mean "of a/an"; and, "der Sohn guten Weins" means
"the son of good wine" (no article, M, Gen strong adj). Strict replacement of the genitive
case with the word "of" maintains the word-order of the German nominal phrase: possessed
- possessor (in genitive). The genitive case also replaces "'s" in English, though reversing
the word-order (in English: possessor's possessed). German itself also uses an "s" (though
without the apostrophe) to indicate possession, in the same word order as English. It is
used mainly with proper nouns, such as "Goethes Heimat", as well as for compounding
words.
Standard genitive constructions are used with nouns and modiers of nouns such as articles
and adjectives, and the inection they receive implies possession. The rst noun may be in
any case and may occur in any part of the sentence; the second noun, which possesses the
rst noun, immediately follows the rst noun, and is in the genitive case. The noun in the
genitive case need not have any modiers - e.g., Heimat Goethes, Heimat Katerina, which
mean the homeland of Goethe and Katerina, respectively - though such constructions can
be cumbersome and ambiguous.
Proper treatment of the genitive case, including all of the declensions, is found in another
part of this book.
German pronouns have genitive forms, but they are used only rarely nowadays, mostly in
archaic or formal German. In many cases, a preposition can be added to allow a dierent
case to be used.
Ich erinnere mich ihrer. (I remember her)
Also possible: Ich erinnere mich an sie.
The possessive pronouns (mein-, dein-, unser-, etc.) are almost identical in form to the
genitive pronouns and but they directly modify their attribute and could be conceived of
as adjectives, though they decline dierently. Alternatively, one could think of possessive
pronouns, e.g., "mein-", as replacing the phrase, "of me". Directly translated, "mein-"
means "my" in English.
Examples:
265
Pronouns
I want the teacher's book. Let's rewrite this as: I want the book of the
teacher.
-Ich will das Buch des Lehrers (der Lehrerin).
--The genitive case here is masculine (feminine) singular, inecting the denite article
(des/der) as well as the noun (Lehrer (+s), but not Lehrerin, which doesn't change because
it is feminine).
Without his friend's car, we cannot go home.
-Ohne den Wagen seines Freundes knnen wir nicht nach Hause fahren.
--Here, two possessive relationships are mentioned. The car belongs to the friend, and
the friend belongs to "him". For illustrative purposes, one could conceivably re-write the
prepositional phrase as "without the car (accusitive case) of the friend of him". German's
rendering is far less awkward.
The wall of the building is old and brown.
-Die Wand des Gebudes ist alt und braun.
--As in the rst example, the genitive case here is in the masculine singular, and inects
the denite article and the noun (M,N add +s/+es in the genitive case).
266
267
Side-by-side Declension of Denite Articles, der-word Endings, 3rd-Person Pronouns (and possessives), Strong Adjective Endings,
and Interrogative Pronouns, to illustrate their similarities
Gender and Case
Denite Article
der-word Endings
Pronoun (possesStrong Adjective
Interrogative Prosive)
Endings
nouns, sometimes
also used as relative pronouns
Masculine
Nominative
der
-er
er
-er
wer (who?)
Accusative
den
-en
ihn
-en
wen (whom?)
Dative
dem
-em
ihm
-em
wem (to/for whom?)
Genitive
des + s
-es
(sein-) (correspond-en (M,N strong ad(wessen) (whose?
ing "s")
jective endings in
- form similar to
genitive case do not
masculine, genitive
t pattern)
relative pronoun).
N.B.(1)
Neuter
Nominative
das
-es
es
-es
was (what?)
Accusative
das
-es
es
-es
was (what?)
Dative
dem
-em
ihm
-em
Genitive
des + s
-es
(sein-) (correspond-en (M,N strong ading "s")
jective endings in
genitive case do not
t pattern)
Feminine
Nominative
die
-e
sie
-e
Accusative
die
-e
sie
-e
Dative
der
-er
ihr
-er
Genitive
der
-er
(ihr-)
-er
Plural
Nominative
die
-e
sie
-e
Accusative
die
-e
sie
-e
Dative
den + n
-en
ihnen N.B.(2)
-en
Genitive
der
-er
(ihr-)
-er
268
Contents
N.B.(1) The use of "wessen" is considered old-fashioned, though most Germans would nd
it endearing to hear a non-native speaker use the word. One is encouraged to use the
"gehren + dativ (wem?)" construction, which means "to belong to s.o. (whom?)".
N.B.(2) The dative plural. Except for words whose plural form adds an "-s" (mainly loanwords), and words whose plural form already ends in "-n"/"-en", all nouns add an "-n/-en"
in the dative plural. Like the s's added to masculine and neuter nouns in the genitive, this
is a remnant from when German inected all of its nouns, which other languages based
on declension, such as Russian and Latin, retain. Sometimes one will notice an "-e" after
masculine and neuter nouns in the dative case, such as the dedication on the Reichstag
building - "Dem deutschen Volke", "for the German People".
This nominal declension is reected in the dative plural pronoun (to/for them), "ihnen",
instead of "ihn" (masculine, accusitive). For example,
Helga: Knnen Sie bitte meinen Brdern helfen?
Olga: Natrlich, aber ich kann ihnen leider nur nach zwei Tagen helfen.
Helga: Unsere Leben gehen trotzdem weiter.
269
80 Sentences
80.1 Sentence Structure in Main clauses
Here is the ultimate syntax guide for a main clause. German allows a considerable amount
of syntactical freedom as parts of speech are indicated through case, rather than syntax.
Nonetheless, there are conventions to follow, especially ones that reduce the ambiguity of
pronouns.
Word-Order in the Main Clause
First Position
Second Position
Mittelfeld
Anything
Conjugated Verb
Nominative Pronoun
Reexive Pronoun
Accusative Pronoun
Dative Pronoun
(Temporal Expressions)
Nominative Noun
Dative Noun
Accusative Noun
Prepositional Phrases
Adverbs, Predicate Adjectives
Verbal negation using "nicht"
Final Position All Remaining
Verbs
Separable Prexes
Past Participles (conjugated verb
should be either "haben" od. "sein)
Innitives
271
Sentences
Word-Order in the Main Clause
Nachfeld
This is the ocially-sanctioned syntax of a main clause. However, German syntax is not
written in stone. One has considerable latitude in the way one constructs one's sentence.
Before eshing out the topic, here are some rules, conventions, and words of advice:
1) In terms of being placed in proper syntax, the pronouns are the most important, for they
are the ones most liable to ambiguity ("sie" = which person, what part of speech, which
case? Put it in its correct position).
2) It is not possible for a sentence to include all of the listed items, but it is still good to
be able to reproduce that schema from memory.
3) You must be able to recognize an element of a sentence. For example, you must not split
something like, "mit einem Buch", for that is a prepositional phrase, i.e., one and only one
sentence element. Many other sentence elements are, however, only one word. You get a
lot better at this as time goes on.
4) Two good mnemonics. Number one: pronouns before nouns. always. even if it feels
weird to put both your accusative and dative objects before your subject (a noun), you
must get used to it. It doesn't happen very often, though.
5) The second one is "ADDA" (i.e., NOT DAAD, the Deutsche Akademische Austausch
Dienst). ADDA describes, rst, the pronouns (Accusative, then Dative), and then the nouns
(Dative, then Accusative). ADDA. think ABBA, but with D's instead of B's.
6) The rst position is usually your subject, but can also draw attention to something you
want to discuss.
7) As will be explained below, prepositional phrases and adverbs follow the "Time, Manner,
Place" format.
8) Beyond reducing/eliminating ambiguity, you actually do have a fair amount of freedom.
"Time, Manner, Place" is more a suggestion than a commandment, and most German
textbooks tell you to learn the schema laid out above, but then to speak and write your
sentences with items in ascending order of importance. Put the important stu at the end.
Then you get to your verb, which gives all of the words in the sentence meaning, resulting
in a crescendo of emotion and understanding. Or not. But you see how that might work.
9) If you speak enough, your verbs start going to the right places. It will seem perfectly
natural that the verb is in the second position, and that the other verbs are at the end.
Getting used to subordinate clauses takes more time, but eventually your words go to the
right place. Don't worry about making mistakes, but also try not to forget which verb you
have waiting in your head until the sentence ends.
272
Im Park
machte
Mittelfeld
nach Hause
ich mit dem Auto nach
Kln
er einen langen Spaziergang
Punctuation
.
.
.
Second position does not equal second word, as you can see above. However, there is only
one group of words allowed before the conjugated verb. Such groups of words are called
"phrases". While you can put very long phrases in front of the conjugated verb you mustn't
use two. Therefore the sentence "Heute Abend ich fahre mit dem Auto nach Kln" is wrong.
This is a big dierence between English and German syntax.
80.2.2 Clauses with two verb parts - Stze mit zwei Verbteilen
273
Mittelfeld
den Mantel
den Mantel
Hausaufgaben
sein Vater ein fantastisches Essen
sein Vater gestern
Second Verb
an
angezogen
machen
gekocht
gekocht
Punctuation
.
.
.
.
.
Sentences
274
80.2.3 Clauses with three verb parts - Stze mit drei Verbteilen
275
Mittelfeld
der morgen
mich
dir deinen Wagen bermorgen
276
knnen
drfen
helfen
Second Verb
.
.
.
Punctuation
Sentences
Time
Objects
Manner
Place
The mnemonic is "STOMP" where S is for subject. However, when looking at wild German
sentences you will nd structures that do not follow these principles but are nonetheless
correct. This is very frequent in spoken language. Mostly the deviation from the neutral
structure is caused by a special focus. While they are not wrong, it would be inappropriate
to use them all the time. Therefore it is best to learn the principles described here. If you
277
Sentences
have mastered them and can use them without thinking about it, you can try some of the
deviations.
Time
Time seems to be a very important concept for German speaking people. It is mostly
mentioned very early in the sentence, either at the very beginning in the rst position
which means that the subject goes directly after the conjugated verb (i.e.: Gestern war ich
im Kino) or early in the middle eld (i.e.: Ich war gestern im Kino). The sentence "Ich
war im Kino gestern" is not exactly wrong, but it would sound weird in most situations. It
could be used though in a casual conversation when putting special emphasis on "im Kino",
but it's not the regular sentence pattern.
Order of Objects
The order of objects is dierent for nouns and pronouns. Pronouns always come before nouns, and reexive pronouns come before everything except nominative pronouns.
ADDA, mentioned above, is a good way to remember the prescribed order of cases for
pronouns and then nouns. As sentences can contain only two objects, here are the three
possible combinations deriving from ADDA:
Two pronouns: accusative before dative (AD)
I
II
Ich habe
Ich gab
Acc. Dat.
sie ihm gegeben.
sie ihm
.
One noun, one pronoun: The pronoun goes rst, regardless of the case
I
II
Ich habe
Ich gab
Pronoun
ihm
sie
Noun
die Kleider gegeben.
dem Jungen
.
Dat.
dem Jungen
dem Jungen
Acc.
die Kleider gegeben.
die Kleider
.
Manner
This includes adverbs and prepositional phrases describing how, why, and by what methods
the event of the sentence has taken place.
278
80.4.1 Interrogatives
Interrogatives (questions) change word order in the rst two elds or so. There are two
kinds. In a question based on a verb, the conjugated verb comes rst. Following that is
the same string of pronouns rst and nouns thereafter (and other sentence elements and
nally the remaining verbs) that was detailed above. The main dierence between questions
and statements is that the freedom of the rst position is eliminated; the item you wanted
to emphasize must now nd a dierent position in the sentence. The ascending-order-ofimportance convention still holds.
Example:
Q: Hast du schon "Fargo" gesehen?
A: "Fargo" habe ich noch nicht gesehen.
The second kind of question involves a question word or wo-compound, which always comes
at the beginning, and is immediately followed by the conjugated verb. They are then
followed by the remaining parts of the sentence in the order outlined above. Be mindful of
the case of the question word, and make sure never to use a wo-compound when referring
279
Sentences
to a person.
Q: Warum hast du "Fargo" nie gesehen? (Why have you never seen "Fargo"?)
A: Ich hatte keine Lust. (I had no interest.)
Q: Wem hast du geholfen? (Wem = "whom?" in the dative case.) (Whom have you
helped?)
A: Ich habe meiner Mutter geholfen. (I have helped my mother.)
Q: Bei wem hast du dich beworben? (From whom have you applied [for a job]?)
A: Beim Geschft meines Onkels habe ich mich beworben. (I applied at my uncle's
business.)
And so on.
80.4.2 Imperatives
Imperatives (commands) also slightly alter the aforementioned main-clause sentence
structure. Imperatives are formed in several ways:
Geh', bitte! (Please go, informal)
Gehen Sie, bitte! (Please go, formal)
Gehen wir, bitte! (Let's go! Within a group)
This sequence - verb in imperative form, perhaps followed by the person to whom it is
directed in the nominative case (depending on the kind of imperative used, however) - is
then followed by all of the other elements of the sentence, in the aforementioned order.
German-speakers, like English-speakers and the speakers of many other languages, consider
the use of the imperative mood to be rude, and, as in English, use a conditional or subjunctive construction to convey requests. This will be dealt with in a dierent section of this
book.
Both of these syntaxes are very easy to master once you understand main-clause syntax.
280
Commas are generally optional in English, whereas they used more often in German.
Here are the common coordinating conjunctions one would nd in German:
German
English
aber
but, nevertheless, however
denn
for, because (rarely used in spoken German; not to be confused with weil)
oder
or
sondern but rather
und
and
As coordinating conjunctions connect two independent clauses, they do not aect wordorder in the two clauses. The rst clause is often separated from the second with a comma
- especially if it is a long or complicated clause - after which follows the coordinating
conjunction and the second clause.
Here are some examples in German:
Ich hasse und ich liebe, und ich wei nicht warum.
Ich bin nicht jung, aber ich bin froh.
There are two more constructions to be aware of: entweder/oder and weder/noch, which
correspond to "either/or" and "neither/nor", respectively.
Entweder bist du mit uns gemeinsam, oder du bist unser Feind.
Entweder/oder and weder/noch can also be employed to contrast two items as well as clauses.
Note how "entweder" functions as an adverb.
English speakers should take note of the dierence between aber and sondern, both of which
can be translated directly as "but". Aber means "however". Sondern means "rather". Many
other languages make this distinction.
Coordinating conjunctions are rather straightforward, and the number of coordinating conjunctions is few.
281
Sentences
because they are unable to stand by themselves as independent clauses. Usually, subordinate and relative clauses occupy a part of the main clause that was not fully explained;
subordinate clauses tend to fulll more abstract missing sentence elements than relative
clauses do. Here are a few examples in English:
Subordinate Clauses:
I know that you are unhappy.
We came because it was your birthday.
We came because we knew that you were having a rough time.
This last example has two subordinate clauses: because we knew and that you were having
a rough time.
Subordinate clauses are usually set o by a subordinating conjunction, such as that, because,
when, if, and so on. In English, it is sometimes possible to omit the subordinating conjunction, specically that, resulting in sentences such as, "I know you are unhappy," which is
perfectly acceptable in English. Such an option does not exist in German.
Relative Clauses:
I know the person to whom you were talking (who you were talking to).
God helps those who help themselves.
You are the person that got hit by the y-ball at the game on Saturday.
Relative clauses relate one element of a clause to another clause by way of a relative pronoun.
The system of relative pronouns in German is considerably more extensive than that of
English.
In German, both subordinate clauses and relative clauses aect syntax, in most cases by
moving the conjugated verb to the end of the clause. Both subordinate clauses and relative
clauses are set o by a comma in German, which can frequently be omitted in English.
We should now examine the two types of clauses in greater detail, and then return to their
syntax.
282
Subordinate clauses provide information missing in the main clause. Consider the previous
two examples. In both cases, the subordinate clause answered the question, "what?", or
what would have been the accusitive object. Other subordinate clauses provide information
that would otherwise have been provided by one of the several parts of speech.
Er hat mich geschlagen, als meine Frau im Klo war.
in the bathroom.)
In this example, the subordinate clause, set o by the conjunction, "als", answers the
question, "when?", which would otherwise be answered adverbially.
The syntax regarding subordinate clauses will be discussed later. At this point, a property
of subordinate clauses that is not altogether shared with relative clauses should be pointed
out. Subordinate clauses are themselves parts of speech for the main clause, and to a
limited extent can be treated as such. Consider the following two sentences, which are
equivalent:
Ich darf in Kanada bleiben, solange wir noch verheiratet sind.
Solange wir noch verheiratet sind, darf ich in Kanada bleiben.
283
Sentences
Note how, in the second sentence, the subordinate clause occupied the rst position, immediately followed by the conjugated verb. In reality, the use of subordinate clauses as
parts of speech integrated into the main clause is limited; they are, for aesthetic reasons,
restricted to the rst position and to following the main clause. At both times they are set
o from the main clause by a comma.
Indem..., ist x passiert. This subordinating conjunction accomplishes the same functions
as the English construction, "by [do]ing something..., x happened."
Indem er die Tr offen gelassen hat, hat er auch die Ruber ins Haus
eingelassen.
By leaving the door open, he let the robbers into the house.
By requiring a subject in the clause, the German construction is less susceptible to ambiguity
than English is; consider the sentence, "by leaving the door open, the robbers were able to
enter the house," which is lacking an agent for the door being left open, even though such
a construction is common in spoken English.
This section must make note of the dierences between the words, als, wenn, and wann, all
of which can mean "when" in English.
Als refers to a single event or condition in the past, usually expressed using the preterite
tense.
Als du mich anriefst, war ich noch nicht zu Hause.
not yet home.)
Wann is the interrogative word for "when". It's use as a subordinating conjunction is
limited to indirect questions and immediate temporal events.
Ich wei nicht, wann er nach Hause kommen wird.
Wenn is the most versatile of the three, and has several other meanings beyond its temporal
meaning. In the temporal space wenn describes, events are less recognized, or focuses on a
condition, rather than an event.
Finally, "wenn" has one other principal function. It also means, "if", and is used in
conditional and subjunctive statements.
Wenn ich einmal reich wr', ... (If i were ever rich...)
284
Feminine
die
die
der
dessen
Plural
die
die
denen
deren
Relative pronouns are similar to the denite article, with the exceptions of the dative plural
and the genitive case being marked in bold.
Note that the distinctions between "that" and "which"; and "that" and "who" in English do
not exist in German, where everything is described with a standard set of relative pronouns
with no regard to how integral the qualities described in the relative clause are to the
antecedent.
As relative clauses take one item from the main clause and use it in some way in a dependent
clause, it is important to consider how relative pronouns work to avoid confusion. All words
in German possess gender, number (singular or plural), and case. The main clause, as it
relates to the antecedent, determines the gender and number of the relative pronoun; the
relative clause determines its case.
In order to use relative clauses successfully, it is critical that this point be understood.
Gender and number are "inherent" to the antecedent; no grammatical agent could conceivably change those properties. The relative pronoun's case is determined by its role in the
relative clause, i.e., how it relates to the other parts of speech in the clause. Consider the
following examples, all based on "the man", who is masculine and singular, and apparently
not well-liked.
Case of Relative Pronoun
Nominative
Accusitive
Dative
Genitive
Example
Der Mann, der nach Hause allein ging, ...
The man, who went home alone, ...
Der Mann, den mein Freund whrend der Hochzeit
schlug, ...
The man, whom my friend punched at the wedding, ...
Der Mann, dem meine Mutter kein Weihnachtsgeschenk gegeben hat, ...
The man, to whom my mother didn't give a Christmas present, ...
Der Mann, dessen Tochter arbeitslos ist, ...
The man, whose daughter is unemployed, ...
In each of these examples, the gender and number of the relative pronoun were determined
by the antecedent, while the case of the relative pronoun was determined by its role in
the relative clause. Note particularly the genitive example, wherein the relative pronoun,
meaning whose, modied a feminine noun, without his gender being aected.
285
Sentences
Whenever you construct a relative clause, be mindful of this rule. Don't confuse yourself
with its complexity, especially regarding the genitive case. As discussed in the chapter on
personal pronouns, the word "whose", as well as other possessive pronouns such as "my",
"your", and so forth, is a pronoun and not an adjective. The pronoun always expresses the
characteristics of its antecedent, viz., gender and number.
Relative pronouns oered within prepositional phrases are perfectly acceptable:
Der Mann, mit dem meine Mutter wieder gestritten hat, ...
The man, with whom my mother argued again, ...
However, if the antecedent is not a person, and the relative pronoun falls within a
prepositional phrase, a wo-compound is frequently substituted:
Das Flugzeug, worin ich nach Seattle geflogen bin, war fast kaputt.
The airplane, in which I flew to Seattle, was almost broken.
Relative clauses almost invariably follow the item that they are modifying or the main
clause as a whole (with the gender and number of the relative pronoun indicating - to
some extent - which potential antecedent it is referring to). Very rarely do they precede
the main clause. Exceptions to this come in the form of aphorisms and proverbs:
Der (oder Wer) heute abend ruhig einschlft, bekommt morgen Eiskrem und Keks.
(He who goes to bed quietly tonight will get ice-cream and cookies tomorrow
- something a mother might say to her children.)
Der jede Woche nach Seattle auf Dienstreise fahrende Mann ist krank.
The to-Seattle-every-week-on-business driving man is sick.
Such a construction is ludicrious in English, but not-uncommon in German. The experienced reader of German will, with practice, be able to read through such an item without
diculty.
It would be best to review what we have learned about subordinate and relative pronouns
before discussing their syntax. Dependent clauses - both subordinating and relative clauses
- modify or in some other way describe the antecedent clause upon which they are based.
Subordinating clauses provide a variety of ways in which new information can relate to
286
Examples
,
"ich", "wir"
"mich", "uns"
A "dich"
D "dir", "mir"
"die Katze"
D "meiner Mutter"
A = ADDA "meinen Vater"
Time, Manner, Place
Time, Manner, Place
They are very complicated.
Placement of Verbs (always at
end of clause}
At end of Clause
Build inwards. Innitive, then
conjugated verb
287
Sentences
Syntax of Dependent Clauses
Field
Items
Three
Modal/-like is conjugated
Modal/-like is not conjugated
(likely the second verb)
Examples
3.2.1. Build inwards.
Conjugated verb (1); innitive
verb (3); modal verb (2)
Once again, no dependent clause will contain each of these elements. But understanding the
position of pronouns is critical. The same conventions listed under the main clause schema
apply.
Verbs in Dependent Clauses
The way the verbs are arranged depends on the number of verbs in the verb-phrase, and
the presence of a modal verb.
Dependent Clauses with One Verb
This is the simplest case. Such a clause has one verb, conjugated based on the person and
number of the subject of the sentence. This conjugated verb is placed at the end of the
clause.
Subordinate Clause
Relative Clause
Du weit, dass ich dich liebe. (You know that I love you.)
Er ist ein Mann, der oft Berlin besucht. (He is a man who
often visits Berlin.)
Du weit, dass ich dich nicht lieben kann. (You know that I
cannot love you.)
Er ist ein Mann, der nach seiner absolvierten Prfung Berlin
besuchen wird. (He is a man who will visit Berlin after his
graduation exam.)
288
Innitive Clauses
1) I am not able to help you move your car. - knnen - helfen - bewegen
2) I will be able to go to the store with you. - werden - knnen - gehen
3) I have not been able to aord that. (haben + "sich (dat) etw. leisten knnen" = to be
able to aord sth.)
4) I have not been able to reach you over the phone. - haben - knnen - erreichen
And so on. The problem is, after you've learned how to put your verb at the end of the
sentence in a main clause, and after you've learned how to "build inwards" in dependent
clauses, and after you've pulled your hair out, night after night, sitting in a cafe in Seattle
declining relative pronouns, German grammar throws yet another rule at you, this one so
pointless and downright counter-productive, and it seems like German grammar is simply
making fun of you at this point, that you leap out of your seat, scream "woo hoo!", and
then get back to work.
The modal verb (or the modal-like verb) has to be at the end of the verb phrase, regardless
of whether it has been conjugated. In cases where it has not, the conjugated verb moves to
the beginning of the verb phrase. Let's look at our examples above.
Du weit, dass...
1) ...ich dir dein Auto nicht bewegen helfen kann. This one is straightforward, because
the modal verb is the conjugated verb, allowing the clause to follow the "build inwards"
principle.
2) ...ich zum Markt mit dir nicht werde gehen knnen. The modal verb must come last. No
semantic or logical reason for this.
3) ...ich mir das nicht habe leisten knnen. The modal verb must come last. Note here that
the modal verb does not form a past participle when it has main verb to modify.
4) ...ich dich am Telefon nicht habe erreichen knnen. Note the somewhat sensible placement
of "nicht".
And so...
Verb-order in Dependent Clauses
Number of Verbs
One (conjugated)
Two (conjugated - modal/-like or auxiliary; innitive)
Three
Modal/-like is conjugated
Modal/-like is not conjugated (likely the second
verb)
289
Sentences
for future and passive constructions. Another verb that can take another verb without
forming an innitive clause is bleiben (e.g., stehenbleiben, to remain standing). These verbs
never form innitive clauses, and the verbs that are used with them go at the end of the
sentence.
Innitive clauses are another kind of clause found in German, and are equivalent to
innitive clauses in English. Consider the following examples in English:
I am here (in order) to help you clean your house.
The car is ready to be driven.
I work to be able to afford my car.
Innitive clauses are formed after verbs that do not regularly take other verbs. They
indicate purpose, intent, and meaning of the action in the main clause. As such, innitive
clauses have no subject, or no nouns in the nominative case. Here are the above examples
in German:
Ich bin hier, um dir dein Haus putzen zu helfen.
Das Auto ist bereit, gefahren zu werden.
Ich arbeite, um mir ein Auto leisten zu knnen.
Innitive clauses are usually found after a main clause, though it is possible for them to
occupy the rst position of a main clause. They are always set o by a comma.
Of particular interest is the construction, "um...zu..."", which corresponds to the English
construction, "in order to...". Um is placed at the beginning of the clause, after which
follows a standard innitive clause. Whereas "in order" is frequently omitted from English
innitive clauses of this sort, "um" is always included such clauses in German.
The Mittelfeld follows the standard syntax of main clauses, though without nominative
nouns and pronouns. At any rate, innitive tend to be rather short.
Verbs (in the innitive form) always come at the end, immediately preceded by the word
zu. In the case of separable-prex verbs, such a verb is written as one word, with the word
zu between the prex and the main verb; e.g. anzuschlagen, auszugehen, abzunehmen, and
so forth.
The syntax of innitive clauses can thus be summarized as follows:
Syntax of Innitive Clauses
Position
Contents
Introduction
Comma or Capital Letter
(beginning of sentence)
Mittelfeld
Reexive Pronoun
Accusative Pronoun
Dative Pronoun
(Temporal Expressions)
290
Examples
"," "Um"
"mich", "uns"
A "dich"
D "dir", "mir"
Expressions of time, especially short temporal
adverbs, are often placed
here.
Innitive Clauses
Syntax of Innitive Clauses
Position
Contents
Dative Noun
Accusitive Noun
End
Prepositional Phrases
Adverbs, Predicate Adjectives
Verbs with no separable prex
Verbs with separable
prex
Either a period to end the
sentence, or a comma to
introduce the main clause
Examples
D "meiner Mutter"
A = ADDA "meinen
Vater"
Time, Manner, Place
Time, Manner Place
zu + Innitive; e.g., "zu
gehen"
prex-zu-innitive, written
as one word; e.g., "anzufangen"
","; "."
291
81 Verbs
81.1 Verbs
German verbs can be classied as weak or as strong. Weak verbs are very regular in their
forms, whereas strong verbs change the stem vowel.
Weak:
kaufen, kaufte, gekauft
Strong:
singen, sang, gesungen
Some German verbs have weak and strong forms. This may depend on meaning:
Der Botschafter wurde nach Berlin gesandt.
Der Sddeutsche Rundfunk sendete ein Konzert aus dem Gasteig.
anfangen begin
Prteritum
(Preterite)
ng an began
293
Verbs
Innitiv
ankommen arrive
C
D
294
anrufen call up
backen bake
befehlen command
beginnen begin
beien bite
bekommen get, receive
bergen salvage
bersten burst
betrgen deceive
biegen bend
bieten oer
binden tie
bitten request
blasen blow
bleiben stay
bleichen bleach
braten roast
brechen break
brennen* burn
bringen* bring
denken** think
A "mixed" verb.
Combination
of strong + weak
verbs.
Prteritum
(Preterite)
kam an arrived
rief an called up
backte baked
befahl commanded
begann began
biss bit
bekam got
barg salvaged
barst burst
betrog deceived
bog bent
bot oered
band tied
bat requested
blies blew
blieb stayed
blich bleached
briet roasted
brach broke
brannte burned
brachte brought
dachte thought
dreschen thresh
dringen force
drfen may
drosch threshed
drang forced
durfte was allowed
empfangen receive
empng received
gedroschen threshed
gedrungen forced
gedurft** been allowed
Used with an innitive.
The past participle
being
the innitive drfen:
"Wir haben
nicht gehen drfen".
empfangen received
Strong Verbs
Innitiv
empfehlen recommend
ernden invent
erlschen extinguish
erschallen echo, sound
erschrecken* scare
Strong (passive) and
weak (active)
forms: "Ich habe
ihn erschreckt."
(I scared him.) and
"Ich erschrak bei
der Explosion."
(I was startled/scared
by
the explosion.)
essen eat
fahren travel
fallen fall
fangen catch
fechten fence
nden nd
iegen y
iehen ee
ieen ow
fressen gorge
Prteritum
(Preterite)
empfahl recommended
erfand invented
erlosch extinguished
erscholl sounded
erschrak scared
a ate
fuhr traveled
el fell
ng caught
focht fenced
fand found
og ew
oh ed
oss owed
fra gorged
gegessen eaten
ist gefahren traveled
ist gefallen fallen
gefangen caught
gefochten fenced
gefunden found
ist geogen own
ist geohen ed
ist geossen owed
gefressen gorged
295
Verbs
Innitiv
frieren freeze
frohlocken rejoice
gren ferment
gebren bear (child)
geben give
gedeihen ourish
gefallen be pleasing,
like
gehen go
gelingen succeed
gelten be valid
genesen recover
genieen enjoy
geschehen happen
frohlockte rejoiced
gor fermented
gebar bore
gab gave
gedieh ourished
geel liked
frohlockt rejoiced
gegoren fermented
geboren born
gegeben given
ist gediehen ourished
gefallen liked
ging went
gelang succeeded
galt was valid
genas recovered
geno enjoyed
geschah happened
gewinnen win
gieen pour
gleichen resemble
gleiten glide, slide
glimmen glow, smoulder
gewann won
go poured
glich resembled
glitt glided
glomm* glowed
graben dig
greifen grasp
296
Prteritum
(Preterite)
fror froze
grub dug
gri grasped
gegraben dug
gegrien grasped
Strong Verbs
Innitiv
H
I
J
K
haben have
halten hold
hngen hang
Prteritum
(Preterite)
hatte had
hielt held
hing hung/hanged*
Hngen is weak in
transit ("Er
hngte das Bild an
die Wand.") and
strong in intransitive
nomances
("Das Bild hing an
der Wand.").
haute* hit
gehauen hit
gehangen
hung/hanged*
Past form hieb
(strong verb)
is used and the meaning becomes
"struck (him) with a
weapon."
heben lift
heien be called
helfen help
hob lifted
hie named
half helped
kennen* know
kannte knew
gekannt known
Kennen is a "mixed"
verb.
Combination of strong
and
weak verbs.
klingen ring
kneifen pinch
kommen come
knnen can
klang rang
kni pinched
kam came
konnte could
geklungen rung
geknien pinched
ist gekommen come
gekonnt* could
Knnen becomes
past participle,
once added with an
innitive:
"Ich habe nicht
gehen knnen."
kriechen crawl
kroch crawled
gehoben lifted
geheien named
geholfen helped
297
Verbs
Innitiv
L
N
O
P
298
laden load
lassen let, allow
laufen run
leiden suer
leihen lend
lesen read
liegen* lie
Liegen (lie, recline,
strong)
and (sich) legen (lay,
put, weak)
are not the same.
Prteritum
(Preterite)
lud loaded
lie let
lief ran
litt suered
lieh lent
las read
lag lay
lgen lie
mahlen grind
meiden avoid
messen measure
misslingen fail
mgen like
log lied
mahlte ground
mied avoided
ma measured
misslang failed
mochte liked
gelogen lied
gemahlen ground
gemieden avoided
gemessen measured
misslungen failed
gemocht* liked
The past participle is
mgen, when used
with a
innitive: "Sie hat
nicht gehen
mgen."
mssen must
musste had to
gemusst* had to
The past participle is
the innitive mssen,
when
used under all modals,
with an
innitive: "Wir
haben nicht
gehen mssen."
nehmen take
nennen name
nahm took
nannte named
genommen taken
genannt named
pfeifen whistle
preisen praise
p whistled
pries praised
gepen whistled
gepriesen praised
Strong Verbs
Innitiv
Q
quellen gush
Prteritum
(Preterite)
quoll* gushed
Weak form quellte.
raten advise
reiben rub
reien tear
reiten* ride
The verb reiten is
only
used for riding an animal
(e.g., horseback riding); to
express "ride" in a
transportation sense
(bus, train,
etc.), fahren is used.
riet advised
reib rubbed
riss tore
ritt rode
geraten advised
gerieben rubbed
gerissen torn
ist geritten ridden
rennen* run
A "mixed" verb, combining
elements of strong and
weak
verbs.
rannte ran
riechen smell
ringen wring
rinnen ow
rufen call
salzen salt
roch smelled
rang wrung
rann owed
rief called
salzte salted
saufen drink
saugen suck
so drank
sog* sucked
gerochen smelled
gerungen wrung
ist geronnen owed
gerufen called
gesalzen/gesalzt
salted
gesoen drunk
gesogen* sucked
The weak forms
saugte and
hat gesaugt. mostlty
the weak form is used.
299
Verbs
Innitiv
schaen create; accomplish, make
schied separated
geschieden* separated
In the sense of "leave"
or
"depart" scheiden
takes sein as a
helping verb: "Karl
ist
aus dem Dienst
geschieden."
scheinen shine
scheien shit
schelten scold
schieen shoot
schlafen sleep
schlagen hit
schleichen sneak
schien shone
schiss shit
schalt scolded
schoss shot
schlief slept
schlug hit
schlich sneaked
schleifen polish
schli* polished
geschienen shone
geschissen shit
gescholten scolded
geschossen shot
geschlafen slept
geschlagen hit
ist geschlichen
sneaked
geschlien* polished
Although the strong
form is
preferred, schleifte
and hat geschleift
(weak) are also used.
schleien slit
schlieen close,lock
schlingen gulp (down)
schmeien ing, toss
schmelzen melt
schneiden cut
schrecken scare
schreiben write
300
Prteritum
(Preterite)
schuf* created
The strong forms
schuf/hat
geschaen are used
when the
meaning is "created"
("Sie hat schne
Sachen geschaffen.").
schli slit
schloss closed
schlang gulped
schmiss ung
schmolz melted
schnitt cut
schrak/schreckte
scared
schrieb wrote
geschlissen slit
geschlossen closed
geschlungen gulped
geschmissen ung
geschmolzen melted
geschnitten cut
geschreckt/geschrocken
scared
geschrieben written
Strong Verbs
Innitiv
schreien scream
schreiten step
schweigen be silent
schwellen* swell, rise
There are two forms of
schwellen:
Strong (above) for the
sense of "to
swell up/ll with
wind," and
Weak to "ll (something) up
with wind/to swell
(something) up."
Se
Prteritum
(Preterite)
schrie screamed
schritt stepped
schwieg was silent
schwoll swelled
schwimmen swim
schwamm swam
schwinden dwindle
schwand dwindled
schwingen swing
schwren swear
sehen see
sein be
senden* send, transmit
In the sense of "transmit" or
"broadcast" only the
weak forms
sendete and hat
gesendet are used.
The weak forms may
also be
used in the sense of
"send."
sieden boil
singen sing
sinken sink
schwang swung
schwur/schwor swore
sah saw
war was
sandte sent
sott/siedete boiled
sang sang
sank sank
ist geschwommen
swum
ist geschwunden
dwindled
geschwungen swung
geschworen sworn
gesehen seen
ist gewesen been
gesandt sent
gesotten boiled
gesungen sung
ist gesunken sunk
301
Verbs
Innitiv
sitzen* sit
Sitzen (sit, strong)
and (sich) setzen
(set, weak) are dierent!
302
Prteritum
(Preterite)
sa sat
sollte should
gesollt* should
With an innitive, the
past participle is
sollen: "Ich
habe nicht gehen
sollen."
spalten split
spaltete split
speien spew
spinnen spin
sprechen speak
sprieen sprout
springen jump
spie spewed
spann spun
sprach spoke
spross sprouted
sprang jumped
stechen stab,sting
stehen stand
stach stung
stand stood
gespalten/gespaltet
split
gespien spewed
gesponnen spun
gesprochen spoken
gesprossen sprouted
ist gesprungen
jumped
gestochen stung
gestanden* stood
In some southern German and
Austrian dialects, stehen takes sein
as a helping verb: "Er
ist
im Eingang gestanden."
stehlen steal
steigen climb
sterben die
stieben y about
stahl stole
stieg climbed
starb died
stob ew about
stinken stink
stoen push,bump
streichen strike,paint
streiten argue
tragen carry, wear
treen meet
stank stank
stie pushed
strich struck
stritt argued
trug wore
traf met
gestohlen stolen
ist gestiegen climbed
ist gestorben died
ist gestoben own
about
gestunken stunk
gestoen pushed
gestrichen struck
gestritten argued
getragen worn
getroen met
Strong Verbs
Innitiv
treiben move, drive
triefen drip
trinken drink
trgen be deceptive
U
V
tun do
berwinden overcome
verderben spoil
verdrieen annoy
vergessen forget
verlieren lose
verschleien wear
(out)
verzeihen forgive
wachsen* grow
In the sense of "to
wax"
(skis, etc.), wachsen
is weak:
(wachste and hat
gewachst).
waschsen wash
weben weave
weichen* yield
In the sense of "to
soften"
(up), weichen is
weak: (weichte
and hat geweicht).
weisen indicate
Prteritum
(Preterite)
trieb drove
triefte/tro dripped
trank drank
trog was deceptive
tat did
berwand overcame
verdarb spoiled
verdross annoyed
verga forgot
verlor lost
verschliss wore (out)
verzieh forgave
wuchs grew
wusch washed
wob/webte wove
wich yielded
wies indicated
gewaschsen washed
gewoben/gewebt woven
ist gewichen yielded
gewiesen indicated
303
Verbs
Innitiv
wenden turn
warb recruited
wurde became
geworben recruited
ist geworden* become
As a helping verb in
the passive voice:
worden, as
in "Ich bin oft
gefragt worden."
(I have often been
asked.)
werfen throw
wiegen weigh
warf threw
wog/wiegte weighed
geworfen thrown
gewogen/gewiegt
weighed
gewunden twisted
gewusst known
wand twisted
wusste knew
wollen want to
wollte wanted to
wringen wring
wrang wrung
gewrungen wrung
zieh accused
zog pulled
geziehen accused
gezogen pulled
zwang compelled
gezwungen compelled
zeihen accuse
ziehen* pull
Do not confuse with
zeihen.
zwingen compel
304
werben recruit
werden become
winden twist
wissen* know
Wissen is a "mixed"
verb,
combination of strong
and weak verbs
X
Y
Z
Prteritum
(Preterite)
wandte* turned
gewollt* wanted to
With an innitive, the
past
participle is wollen:
"Ich habe
nicht gehen
wollen."
Reexive Verbs
Akkusativ (Wenfall)
mich
dich
uns
euch
sich
Dativ (Wemfall)
mir
dir
"
"
"
Notice that all reexives are the same as the Akkusativ and Dativ Pronoun Declensions
except for 3rd Person and 2nd sg./pl. Person formal (man/sie/Sie), in which case all
reexives are sich.
305
Verbs
81.5 Modals
81.5.1 Drfen
Drfen means to be allowed/permitted, may.
Present
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
Past
durfte
durftest
durfte
durften
durftet
durften
Conjunctive
II
drfte
drftest
drfte
drften
drftet
drften
Examples:
Darf ich einen Freund zum Fest bringen? May I bring a friend to the party.
Man darf hier nicht rauchen. One is not allowed to smoke here.
Niemand durfte die Stadt verlassen. No one was allowed to leave the city.
81.5.2 Knnen
knnen means 'to be able, capable'. It is cognate with the English word 'can'/'could'.
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
Present
kann (I can)
kannst (You can)
kann (He/She/It can)
knnen (We can)
knnt (You can)
knnen (They can)
Past
konnte
konntest
konnte
konnten
konntet
konnten
Conjunctive II
knnte
knntest
knnte
knnten
knntet
knnten
Examples:
Ich kann das nicht tun. I can't do it.
Wir konnten sie nicht erreichen. We could not reach them.
81.5.3 Mgen
mgen expresses a pleasure, or desire. In the present tense, it is used transitively with people
or food. e.g. 'Ich mag dich' 'I like you' or 'Ich mag Erdbeeren' 'I like strawberries'. The
subjunctive (of the past) expresses preference to perform the action of a subordinate clause
306
Modals
'Ich mchte nach Frankreich reisen' I would like to travel to France'. 'mgen' is cognate
with the English verb 'may'/'might'.
ich
du
er/sie/es
Present
mag (I would like to)
magst (You like to)
mag (He/She/It likes to)
Past
mochte
mochtest
mochte
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
mochten
mochtet
mochten
Conjunctive II
mchte (I would like to)
mchtest (You would like to)
mchte (He/She/It would
like to)
mchten (We would like to)
mchtet (You would like to)
mchten (They would like
to)
Example:
Ich mchte nach Deutschland reisen. I would like to travel to Germany.
81.5.4 Mssen
mssen expresses something forced on you. It is etymologically related to 'must'.
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
Present
Past
Conjunctive
II
msste
msstest
msste
mssten
msstet
mssten
Examples:
Ich muss nicht arbeiten. Ich brauche nicht zu arbeiten. I don't have to work.
Ich darf nicht arbeiten. I must not work.
Note that the negative nicht mssen is not the English must not, but rather need not
or don't have/need to. must not translates to nicht drfen.
There are however some northern German uses like:
307
Verbs
81.5.5 Sollen
sollen expresses an obligation or duty. It is etymologically related to 'shall'.
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
Present
soll schwimmen (I am to swim)
sollst
soll
sollen
sollt
sollen
Past
sollte (I was to)
solltest
sollte
sollten
solltet
sollten
81.5.6 Wollen
wollen means to want.
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
Present
will rennen (I want to run)
willst
will
wollen
wollt
wollen
Wrong:
Ich habe das tun gedurft - gekonnt - gemocht - gemusst - gesollt.
308
Past
wollte
wolltest
wollte
wollten
wolltet
wollten
Present Tense
309
Verbs
Here the progressive meaning is also emphasized with the word "gerade" meaning something
like: I was JUST ABOUT to wash the dishes(not the same though because it means he is
already doing it and not about to start).
81.7.1 Formation
As in English, the perfect tense consists of two parts. An auxiliary (Hilfsverb) and a
past participle (Partizip Perfekt). Compare the examples given below with their English
translations.
Er
He
hat
has
gelacht.
laughed.
Sie
She
ist
has
gekommen
come.
Die Kinder
The children
haben
have
gegessen.
eaten.
prex
ge
ge
ge
+ 3rd-person sing.
+ (er/sie/es) lacht
+ (er/sie/es) kauft
+ (er/sie/es) mht
participle(er/sie/es)
gelacht
gekauft
gemht
There are some groups of regular verbs that slightly dier from that pattern.
Some verbs drop the prex ge-. Like the other regular verbs they end in -t. These are:
1. Verbs with unseparable prexes (be-, ent-, er-, empf-, ge-, ver-, miss-, zer-)
Examples:
verb
besuchen (visit)
310
past participle
besucht
Perfect Tense
verb
entfernen (remove)
erreichen (achieve)
gehren (belong)
verstecken (hide)
missverstehen (misunderstand)
past participle
entfernt
erreicht
gehrt
versteckt
missverstanden
past participle
kopiert
poliert
= past participle
= aufgemacht
= abgestellt
past participle
ber'setzt
'bergesetzt
3rd-person sg.
geht
isst
schreibt
trinkt
schlft
nimmt
past participle
gegangen
gegessen
geschrieben
getrunken
geschlafen
genommen
311
Verbs
You have to learn these forms by heart. How you can obtain the necessary information and
how you should learn them is described in section tips for learning below.
Note that irregular verbs can be combined with the same prexes as described above. The
same rules regarding the prex ge- apply. Therefore the forms for schreiben, verschreiben
and aufschreiben are geschrieben, verschrieben and aufgeschrieben respectively.
Which verbs are irregular
A lot of verbs that are irregular in English are irregular in German, too. Unfortunately,
this is not always true. It is most likely when the German and the English verb are related
(i.e. look similar).
Examples:
see:
buy:
get:
irregular
irregular
irregular
sehen:
irregular
kaufen:
regular
bekommen: irregular ;-)
Regular verbs are much more frequent than irregular ones, but a lot of the irregular verbs
are used very frequently, for instance haben, sein, gehen, kommen etc.
When in doubt whether a verb is irregular or not, it is best to look it up in a dictionary
(See below).
Examples B:
sich freuen
sich kmmen
sich rgern
312
Perfect Tense
C) the relocation from one place to another or
D) the change of a state
and with
E) sein (be) and bleiben (stay)
Note: none of the verbs from groups C-E is combined with an accusative object.
Examples C: relocation verbs
verb
kommen (come)
reisen (travel)
fahren (drive)
gefahren.
begegnen (meet)
gehen (go)
starten (take off)
aux.
sein
sein
sein
irregular
yes
no
yes
sein
sein
sein
no
yes
yes
In southern German (mostly Bavarian) use, also stehen, sitzen und schwimmen are treated
like a (non-)movement:
Ich bin gestanden - gesessen - geschwommen. High German is: Ich habe gestanden
- gesessen - geschwommen.
Aber: Ich habe den See durchschwommen.
aux.
sein
sein
irr.
yes
yes
sein
no
Exceptions to the rules Some of the verbs from group A can be used with an object in
accusative case. In this case, they take haben as auxiliary.
Compare:
Ich bin nach Kalifornien gefahren.
I drove to California.
Ich bin mit dem Auto nach Kalifornien gefahren.
I drove to California by
car (literally: with the car)
Ich habe das Auto (Akk.) nach Kalifornien gefahren. I drove the car to
California.
The same applies to iegen (y), starten and reiten (ride a horse).
313
Verbs
81.7.5 Usage
Unlike in English the dierence in meaning between Perfekt and Prteritum is rather small.
The main dierence between those two forms lies in usage. Perfekt is mostly used in spoken
language, while Prteritum is mostly reserved for written texts. However, the modals, the
verbs haben and sein and the expression es gibt are almost exclusively used in Prteritum even when speaking. One reason might be the frequency of those verbs, the other reason is
most likely the very complex perfect forms for modals.
(This is in southern German use; in northern German, you'll hear the preterite also in
spoken language.)
On the other hand, the perfect tense is used in writing too. The more oral the text is,
the more perfect tense you will nd (for example in personal letters etc.). If an action has
happened very recently, it tends to be in perfect tense too.
Look at the following conversation and concentrate on the distribution of Prteritum and
Perfekt.
(1) Anna: Hallo Peter. Wo warst du denn? Ich habe dich schon lange nicht mehr gesehen.
(2) Peter: Hallo Anna. Ich war die letzen zwei Wochen im Urlaub.
(3) Anna: So? Wo warst du denn genau?
(4) Peter: Auf der Insel Elba, in einem fantastischen Hotel. Es gab jeden Abend ein Bet
und man konnte essen, so viel man wollte!
(5) Anna (lacht): Ich glaube dir sofort, dass dir das gefallen hat. Du hast aber nicht nur
gegessen, oder? Was hast du denn den ganzen Tag gemacht?
(6) Peter (lacht auch): Nein, natrlich nicht. Ich bin viel geschwommen, ich habe mir die
Insel angeguckt und am Abend bin ich immer zum Tanzen in eine Disco gegangen.
(7) Anna: Aha... Und? Hast du jemanden kennen gelernt?
(8) Peter (grinst): Kein Kommentar.
Vocablary to help you understand the text:
der Urlaub, -e
genau
die Insel, -n
das Bffet, -s
gefallen
angucken
314
vacation
exactly, precisely
island
buffet
like
to look at (colloquial)
Perfect Tense
kennen lernen
grinsen
get to know
grin
Perfekt
habe gesehen (1)
es hat gefallen (5)
du hast gegessen (5)
du hast gemacht (5)
ich bin geschwommen (6)
ich habe angeguckt (6)
ich bin gegangen (6)
du hast kennen gelernt
http://www.canoo.net
315
Verbs
Infinitiv
infinitiv
gehen
nehmen
fahren
lesen
essen
kommen
bleiben
sein
anfangen
...
Prsens
3rd person
geht
nimmt
fhrt
liest
isst
kommt
bleibt
ist
fngt ... an
Prteritum
preterite
ging
nahm
fuhr
las
a
kam
blieb
war
fing ... an
Hilfsverb
auxiliary
ist
hat
ist
hat
hat
ist
ist
ist
hat
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
Partizip Perfekt
past participle
gegangen
genommen
gefahren
gelesen
gegessen
gekommen
geblieben
gewesen
angefangen
* The third example is correct, although not very frequent. You might use it if you want to stress
what exactly his father has prepared or if you have to repeat the sentence because your partner has
not understood this particular part of it.
Second position does not equal second word, as you can see above. However, there is only
one group of words allowed before the conjugated verb (the auxiliary in this case). Such
316
Past tense
groups of words are called "phrases". While you can put very long phrases in front of the
conjugated verb, you must not use two. Therefore the sentence "Gestern sein Vater hat ein
fantastisches Essen gekocht" is wrong.
dass
wenn.
*In spoken language weil is often used like und or aber, which means that it is followed by a main
clause. However, after weil, speakers often pause for a little while. There is no pause after either
und or aber.
Weil + main clause is not allowed in written language. Therefore you may say: Ich gehe, weil (little pause) - ich bin mde. But you wouldn't use it in a letter. At least not yet.
The correct conjunction for a main clause is denn, which is rarely used in spoken language.
In subordinated clauses the conjugated verb, i.e. the auxiliary, stands at the very end of
the sentence. The past participle stands directly in front of it. For example:
Ich
Ich
Ich
Ich
wei,
glaube dir,
glaube dir,
gehe,
conj.
dass
weil
denn
wenn
aux.
participle
du
das
gemacht
du
bisher noch nie gelogen
du hast bisher noch nie gelogen.
du
gegangen
aux.
hast.
hast.
bist.
lernen
lernte
lerntest
lernte
lernten
lerntet
lernten
317
Verbs
If the stem of a verb (innitive minus -en) ends in -t (arbeit-en), -d (end-en) or consonant
plus m or n (n-en, rechn-en) you add an -e before the preterite endings.
arbeiten
arbeitete
arbeitetest
arbeitete
arbeiteten
arbeitetet
arbeiteten
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
fahren
fuhr
fuhrst
fuhr
fuhren
fuhrt
fuhren
stehen
stand
stand(e)st
stand
standen
standet
standen
With -te
Few irregular verbs take the -te ending. Examples are: nennen, rennen, kennen, bringen,
denken and the irregular modals (knnen, drfen and mssen).
ich
du
er/sie/es
wir
ihr
sie/Sie
318
nennen
nannte
nanntest
nannte
nannten
nanntet
nannten
Future Tense
The whole conversation is about the future, so there is no need to indicate it again in the
tense of the verb.
Some more examples:
Ich schreibe den Brief heute Abend.
I will write the letter this evening.
Wir gehen nchstes Jahr nach Spanien.
We will go to Spain next year.
81.10.2 Futur I
Where the meaning would not otherwise be clear, and in more formal language, e.g. to
express an intention, German talks about the future tense by using werden plus the
innitive at the end of the clause. The forms of werden are:
ich werde
du wirst
er/sie/es/man wird
wir werden
ihr werdet
sie/Sie werden
Examples:
Ich werde ein Haus bauen.
I shall build a house. (an intention)
Wir werden sehen.
We will see.
319
Verbs
81.10.3 Future II
The Future II is formed with added "sein" oder "haben" and expresses that one action will
happen before another one.
Wenn sie das Abendessen gekocht haben wird, werden sie kommen.
When she will have cooked the dinner, they will come.
In the colloquial language, the Futur II is normally used when speaking about something
that should have happened already, but you are not sure or you can't prove it.
----
320
82 APPENDICES
321
83 Contents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
#A.01
#A.02
#A.03
#A.04
#A.05
#A.06
#A.07
#A.08
#A.09
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Das Alphabet1
Phrase Book2
Grammar Reference Table I3
Grammar Reference Table II4
Webseiten and other resources5
bungen zum Satzbau6
Namen7
False Friends8
Level I Vocabulary9
84 on page 325
81.7.4 on page 312
81.7.4 on page 312
81.7.4 on page 312
81.7.4 on page 312
81.7.4 on page 312
81.7.4 on page 312
81.7.4 on page 312
81.7.4 on page 312
323
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FGrammar%2FAlphabet%20and%20Pronunciation
325
Hello!
Good day!
Day
Good morning!
Good evening- this is for close friends and family
Wie geht es Ihnen? How are you (formal)? How are you doing?
Wie geht's
Es geht mir gut
Prima!,
Spitze!
Gut!
Sehr gut!
Toll!
Ganz gut
So lala
Es geht so
Nicht gut
Schlecht
Sehr schlecht
Miserabel
Und Ihnen?
Auf Wiedersehen!
Wiedersehen!
Tschss!
Ciao!
Bis spter!
Bis dann!
Wiederhren
Good bye!
Bye!
See you!
Ciao! (Italian for 'see you')
Later! (until later)
Later! (until whenever)
(hear) again (used over the phone)
Note: How are you? is not a typical query in German greeting etiquette as it is in English,
where the standard answer is I'm Fine. A German speaker will consider this to be an
earnest question, and you may receive an honest answer that is longer than you expected.
Note: Wiedersehen directly translates as "to see again".
327
Go left
Go right
328
Common phrases
Translation
Phrase
IPA
Translation
German
hello
good-bye
please
youre welcome
thank you
that one
how much?
English
yes
no
I need help
Phrase
Deutsch
Hallo
auf Wiedersehen
bitte
bitte schn
danke
das da
wie viel?
Englisch
ja
nein
Ich brauche Hilfe
IPA
/d /
/halo/
/af vidzen/
/bt/
/bt n/
/dak/
/das da/
/vi l/
/l/
/ja/
/na n/
/i ba hlf/
excuse me
pardon me
I am sick
wheres the bathroom?
generic toast
Entschuldigen Sie
verzeihen Sie
ich bin krank
Wo ist die Toilette?
/ntldgn zi/
/fa n zi/
/ bn kak/
/vo st di tolt/
Do you speak
English?
I dont speak
German
I dont understand
Sorry
I dont know
Happy birthday
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
prosit
prost
Sprechen Sie Englisch?
Ich spreche kein Deutsch
Ich verstehe nicht.
Entschuldigung
Ich wei nicht
Herzlichen Glckwunsch
zum Geburtstag
/pozit/
/post/
/pn zi l/
/ pr ka n d /
/ fte nt/
/ntldg/
/ va s nt/
/hln glkvn m
gbtak/
Pronunciation
Sound
Pronunciation
(doytsh)
(HAH-loh)
(owf VEE-der-zayn)
(BIT-tuh)
(BIT-tuh shurn)
(DAHNG-kuh)
(duss dah)
(vee feel)
(ANG-lish)
(yah)
(nine)
(ish BROW-khuh HEELfuh)
(ent-SHOOL-dee-gen zee)
(fair-TSEYE-en zee)
(ish bin krunk)
(vo ist dee toe-LET-tuh)
Sound
(listen1 )
(listen2 )
(listen3 )
(listen4 )
(PRO-zeet)
(proast)
(SHPRE-shen zee ANGlish)
(ish SHPRE-shuh kine
doytsh)
(ish fair-SHTAY-uh nisht)
(ent-SHOOL-dee-gung)
(ish vice nisht)
(HAIRTS-lee-shen
GLUKE-voonsh tsoom
ge-BOORTS-tahk)
(listen12 )
(listen13 )
(listen14 )
(listen5 )
(listen6 )
(listen7 )
(listen8 )
(listen9 )
(listen10 )
(listen11 )
(listen15 )
(listen16 )
(listen17 )
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Deutsch.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Hallo.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Auf%20Wiedersehen.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ADe-bitte-2.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Danke.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Das.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Wie%20viel.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Englisch.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Ja.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Nein.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Wo%20ist%20die%20Toilette.
ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Prosit.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Prost.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Sprechen%20Sie%20Englisch.
ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Ich%20verstehe%20nicht.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3ACPIDL%20German%20-%20Entschuldigung.ogg
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Media%3AHerzlichen%20Gl%C3%BCckwunsch%20zum%
20Geburtstag.ogg
329
Case
Nominativ
der
die
das
die
Genitiv
des
der
des
der
Dativ
dem
der
dem
den
Akkusativ
den
die
das
die
ich
du (Sie*)
er, sie, es
Plural
I
you
he, she, it
wir
ihr (Sie*)
sie
we
you
they
1
2
3
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20I
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20II
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German%2FLevel%20III
331
Plural
meiner
deiner (Ihrer*)
seiner, ihrer,
seiner
my
your
his, her,
its
unser
eurer (Ihrer*)
ihrer
our
your
their
*Polite form.
Examples:
Ich erbarme mich eurer. I take pity on you(rs).
meinerunbedeutenden Meinung nach. in my humble opinion (IMHO)
----
Plural
mir
dir (Ihnen*)
ihm, ihr, ihm
me
you
him, her,
uns
euch (Ihnen*)
ihnen
us
you
them
it
*Polite form. ----
332
mich
Plural
me
uns
us
dich (Sie*)
ihn, sie, es
you
him, her, it
euch (Sie*)
sie
you
them
*Polite form.
333
I am tall.
You are very tall.
She is short.
They are tall.
In these cases, we use the correct form of sein for each situation. Please notice the nal two
sentences both use 'Sie', and we must look at the verb to determine the dierence between
'she' and 'they'.
In German, the English innitive 'to be' is translated as sein.
This is the table of the forms of 'sein', with rough English translations. Note that in English,
there are only three forms (am, is, are) while German has ve (bin, bist, ist, sind, seid).
Also, the verb conjugation of the two you-formals are always the exact same.
German
sein
Person
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
Singular Pronoun
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
Verb Form
Plural Pronoun
Verb Form
bin
bist
ist
sind
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
sind
seid
sind
sind
English
to be
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
1
2
3
I
you
he / she / it
you (formal)
am
are
is
are
we
y'all
they
y'all (formal)
are
are
are
are
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335
He plays volleyball.
I do my homework.
We come from Munich.
What are you doing?
In these sentences, dierent verbs and endings are used. Note that the verb is always in
second position.
When conjugating normal verbs, use the endings shown below (a memory hook is the
"best ten" endings). Note that in normal verbs, such as spielen and machen, ihr-form and
er/sie/es-form are the same and the wir-form, sie (pl)-form and the formal are all the same
as the innitive.
-en
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
-e
-st
-t
-en
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
-en
-t
-en
-en
spielen - to play
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
spiele
spielst
spielt
spielen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
spielen
spielt
spielen
spielen
mache
machst
macht
machen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
machen
macht
machen
machen
machen - to make/do
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
I have no time.
Give me the book.
She likes to hike.
He is reading a novel.
In each of these sentences, we use an irregular verb. Irregularity occurs in the ich-form or
the du-form and er/sie/es-forms. There are three types of irregularity.
336
sehen - to see
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
sehe
siehst
sieht
sehen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
sehen
seht
sehen
sehen
gebe
gibst
gibt
geben
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
geben
gebt
geben
geben
geben - to give
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
87.3.2 Haben
A similar, yet dierent, change occurs in the verb "haben". As in the irregularity above,
the du-form and er/sie/es-form change.
haben - to have
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
habe
hast
hat
haben
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
haben
habt
haben
haben
wandern - to hike
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
wandre
wanderst
wandert
wanderen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
wandern
wandert
wandern
wanderen
basteln - to build
1st
ich
bastle
wir
basteln
337
du
er / sie / es
Sie
bastelst
bastelt
basteln
ihr
sie
Sie
bastelt
basteln
basteln
Modals are a new kind of verb. They are the equivalent to helping verbs in English. There
are seven basic modals: knnen (can), mgen (like), drfen (may), wollen (want), sollen
(should), mssen (must), and mchten (would like). Mchten isn't technically a modal, but
it acts like one in most aspects.
Modals are conjugated very dierently. The ich-form and er/sie/es-form are always alike
and singular has a dierent verb in the rst syllable (except in sollen and mchten). Below
are the conjugations of the six basic modals and mchten.
knnen - can
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
kann
kannst
kann
knnen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
knnen
knnt
knnen
knnen
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
mag
magst
mag
mgen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
mgen
mgt
mgen
mgen
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
darf
darfst
darf
drfen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
drfen
drft
drfen
drfen
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
will
willst
will
wollen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
wollen
wollt
wollen
wollen
mgen - like
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
drfen - may
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
wollen - want
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
338
Separable Verbs
sollen - should
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
soll
sollst
soll
sollen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
sollen
sollt
sollen
sollen
mssen - must
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
muss
musst
muss
mssen
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
mssen
msst
mssen
mssen
mchte
mchtest
mchte
mchten
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
mchten
mchtet
mchten
mchten
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
Some verbs in German are separable: they have a prex that can be separated from the
base. When the verb is used with a modal, it regains the prex at the end of the sentence.
When it is the main verb of the sentence, the prex is moved to the end of the sentence.
An "example" in English would be the word "intake". When it is used as a verb, it becomes
"take ... in". When it is used as an adjective or a noun, it becomes "intake" again.
Two easy examples of separable verbs are aussehen and mitkommen. Note that aussehen is
also irregular.
aussehen - to appear
1st
2nd
3rd
Fml.
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
sehe aus
siehst aus
sieht aus
sehen aus
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
sehen aus
seht aus
sehen aus
sehen aus
339
340
ich
du
er / sie / es
Sie
komme mit
kommst mit
kommt mit
kommen mit
wir
ihr
sie
Sie
kommen mit
kommt mit
kommen mit
kommen mit
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341
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
342
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88.6 Blogs
Deutschlernblog33 Tips for learning German. Site entirely in German.
DaF-Blog34 On German language and how to learn it. Parts of the Site are in English,
but most of it in German.
Deutsch-Happen35 small, bite-sized snaps of German language for the advancing learner
88.7 Podcasts
88.7.1 from learners
Speaken Sie Deutsch?36 : Podcast from Canadian Hugh Gordon ( Rss-Feed37 ).
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
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http://www.deutsch-lernen.com
http://userweb.port.ac.uk/~joyce1/abinitio/pronounce/
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http://speakensiedeutsch.blogspot.com/
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http://www.deutschlern.net/podcast-deutsch-lernen-mit-umgangssprache
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http://learninggerman.mschubertberlin.de/podblog/rss.php
343
88.8 Tandem
Tandem by E-Mail47
The Mixxer48 Tandem via Skype49
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
344
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89 A.07 - Namen
89.1 Names
This is a list of common, modern German names. Please add to it.
Girls
1. Marie
2. Sophie/Soe
3. Maria
4. Anna, Anne
5. Leonie
6. Lena
7. Emily
8. Lea/Leah
9. Julia
10. Laura
pet names
Alex
Andi
-
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345
A.07 - Namen
Christian, Christoph
David
Dennis, Denis
Edvin
Fabian
Felix
Finn, Fynn
Florian
Jan
Jonas
Julian, Julius
Kevin
Lars
Leo, Leon
Luka, Luca, Lucas, Lukas
Manuel
Matthias
Max, Maximilian
Michael
Moritz
Niko, Nick, Nikolas, Niklas, Nicolas
Noah
Patrick
Paul
Philipp
Robin
Sebastian
Simon
Stefan, Stephan, Steen
Sven
Tim
Tobias
Tom
Yannick, Yannik
older names:
Al, Alfred
Adolf
Albert, Bert, Kunibert
Anton
Achim, Joachim
Adam
Aaron
Armin
Bjrn
346
Chris
Eddy
Fabi
Flo, Flori
Juli, Jule
Luki
Manu, Mani
Matt, Matti, Mats
Max, Maxi
Micha, Michi
Mo
Nik, Niko
Pat
Phil
Sebi, Seb, Sebbe, Basti
Simi
Ste
Svenni
Timmi
Tobi
Tommi
Bernard
Bennedikt
Bruno
Bodo
Boris
Berthold
Benjamin
Clemens
Carlo, Karlo, Karl
Carsten
Dieter, Dietrich
Daniel
Domian, Damian
Detlev
Dirk
Erik
Erwin
Emil
Eberhard
Eckart
Edmund
Ernst
Ewald
Franz, Frank
Fritz
Fridolin
Fred, Frederik
Friedrich, Friedhelm
Falko
Gustav
Gerhardt
Gert
Gnther
Gregor
Gunnar
Hans, Hans-Jrgen, Hannes
Harald
Heinz
Heinrich, Heiner
Hugo
Hektor
Helge
Heiko
Hartmut
Herbert
Holger
Ingo, Ingolf
Jrgen, Jrg
347
A.07 - Namen
Jens
Janosch
Jakob
Johann
Karl
Klaus
Knut
Kurt
Konrad
Kaspar
Ludwig
Leif
Manfred
Malte
Norbert
Nils
Olaf
Oliver
Otto, Ottfried
Paul
Peter
Rudi, Rdiger, Rudolph
Roman
Robert
Rex
Reinhard, Rainer, Reiner
Sren
Siegfried
Snke
Thomas
Till
Torsten
Ulf
Ulli
Uwe
Udo
Viktor
Werner
Wolfgang, Wolf, Welf
Wilhelm, Willi
Girls' Names
young ones:
Anna, Anne, Annika
Amelie
348
Angelina
Bianca
Christina, Christine
Daniela
Elea
Eva
Elisa
Emma
Emely, Emily
Franziska
Finja
Hannah, Hanna
Isabell, Isabelle
Julia, Jule, Juliane
Jana
Janine, Janina
Johanna
Jasmin
Klara
Katharina
Kim
Kira
Lena
Lara
Luise, Luisa
Lea
Lina
Larissa
Lisa
Lina
Leonie
Liv
Maike, Meike, Mareike
Melissa
Merle
Mercedes
Marie
Maja
Marlene, Marleen
Martina
Nina
Nicole
Nora
Petra
Paula
Pia
Ronja
Svenja
349
A.07 - Namen
Sarah
Soe, Sophie, Sophia
Samantha
Stella
Susie
Tabea
Tamara
Vivien
Vanessa
older ones:
Angela
Anita
Andschana
Antonia
Birgit
Brigitte
Berta
Christa, Christel
Doris
Diana
Fanny
Frieda
Gerta
Gisela
Gutrun
Hannelore
Helga
Heidi, Heide
Inga, Inge
Iris
Ilse
Ingrid
Josephine
Karin, Karen
Linda
Lydia
Marta
Monika
Nadja
Olivia
Roswitha
Renate
Susanne
Sabine
Sissi
Simone
Silke
350
Tina, Tine
Ursula
Ulla
Vera
Veronika
Winnifried
Wanda
Wilhelma
Mller
Schmidt
Schneider
Fischer
Meyer
Weber
Wagner
Becker
Schulz
Homann
Schfer
Koch
Bauer
Richter
Klein
Wolf
Schrder
Neumann
Schwarz
Zimmermann
Braun
Krger
Hofmann
Hartmann
Lange
Schmitt
Werner
Schmitz
Krause
Meier
Lehmann
Schmid
Schulze
Maier
351
A.07 - Namen
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
352
Khler
Herrmann
Knig
Walter
Mayer
Huber
Kaiser
Fuchs
Peters
Lang
Scholz
Mller
Wei
Jung
Hahn
Schubert
Zcher
1
2
3
353
354
blank
bitten
Beet
bat
Bart
bar
bang
bald
Bagger
Bad
Ass
Art
Arm
Apart
Angel
also
After
Word
First
fern
Fell
Fee
fasten
fast
fatal
Fang, fang
falls
Elf
dick
Danke
Bug
Brilliant, brillant
Brand
bog
Blech
Word
355
356
Held
Heck
hart
Happen
Hang
Handy
half
Hack
gut
grub
Grad
Grab
Gift
Gang
Funk
fort
og
Word
Lot
log
Lob
List
links
Lied
Last
lag
Lack
Labor
Kind
Hut
Hummer
Hub, hub
Hose
Herd
hell
Word
357
358
Sage
Rot
Roman
Rock
Rind
Regal
Rat
Rad
Rang
Pest
nun
Note
Not
Mist
Maul
Made
Lust
Word
Wade
Tot
Ton
Tod
toll
Taste
Tang
Tag
Stern
stark
Stare
Stab
Spur
Speck
Silvester
Sense
See
Word
359
360
will
wider
Wetter
Welt
was
war
Wand
Word
361
Ich
Wir
Du
Sie
Ihr
Sie
Er
Sie
Es
Sie
(formal)
(formal)
91.1.2 Verbs
---To Have
---Have
Has
1
2
3
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363
Am
Are
Is
Bin
Bist
Sind
Seid
Ist
Hello!
Hallo!
Servus! (used in Bavaria and Austria)
Moin! or Moin Moin! (used in northern Germany)
Grezi! (used in Switzerland)
Good morning! Guten Morgen! or Morgen!
Good day!
Guten Tag! or Tag!
Good evening! Guten Abend! or N'Abend!
Gr Gott! (used in southern Germany, Austria
Goodbye!
Auf Wiedersehen! or Wiedersehen
Bye!
Tschss! or Tschau!
Servus! (used in Bavaria, Austria)
Later!
Bis spter! or Bis dann!
Good night!
Gute Nacht!
Gut
Spitze!
Prima!
Sehr gut!
Schlecht
Miserabel
364
Wer
Was
Wo
Wann
Warum
Wie
Freizeit
91.1.6 Genders
---Boy
Girl
Man
Woman
Boys
Girls
Men
Women
Der
Das
Der
Die
Die
Die
Die
Die
Junge
Mdchen
Herr
Frau
Jungen
Mdchen
Mnner
Frauen
91.2 Freizeit
91.2.1 Sports & Activities
---Sport(s)
Interests
Soccer
USA Football
Volleyball
Basketball
Tennis
Baseball
9-pin Bowling
Chess
Board Game
Game
Homework
Television
Movie
Sport
Hobbys/Interessant
Fuball
Amerikan Football
Volleyball
Basketball
Tennis
Baseball
Kegeln
Schach
Das Brettspiel
Das Spiel
Hausaufgaben
Fernsehen
Der Film, Filme
91.2.2 Conjunctions
---And
But
Or
Und
Aber
Oder
91.2.3 Verbs
----
365
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
To
Have
Be
Be Called
Play
Do/Make
Read
Watch
See
Work
Write
Swim
haben
sein
heien
spielen
machen
lesen
schauen
sehen
arbeiten
schreiben
schwimmen
91.2.4 Numbers
---One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Thirty
Forty
Fifty
Sixty
Seventy
Eighty
Ninety
Hundred
Thousand
Eins
Zwei
Drei
Vier
Fnf
Sechs
Sieben
Acht
Neun
Zehn
Elf
Zwlf
Dreizehn
Vierzehn
Fnfzehn
Sechzehn
Siebzehn
Achtzehn
Neunzehn
Zwanzig
Dreiig
Vierzig
Fnfzig
Sechzig
Siebzig
Achtzig
Neunzig
Hundert
Tausend
366
Nach
Vor
Viertel
Halb
Freizeit
Tag
Heute
Morgen
Gestern
Morgen (use morgen frh for tomorrow morning)
Vormittag
Nachmittag
Abend
Nacht
Mittag
Mitternacht
91.2.7 Days
---Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Montag
Dienstag
Mittwoch
Donnerstag
Freitag
Samstag or Sonnabend
Sonntag
91.2.8 Months
---January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
Januar
Jnner (used in Austria)
Februar
Mrz
April
Mai
Juni
Juno (in spoken word only)
Juli
Julei (in spoken word only)
August
September
Oktober
November
Dezember
367
91.2.9 Seasons
---Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Frhling
Sommer
Herbst
Winter
91.2.10 Time
---Time
Free Time
Always
Often
Sometimes
Seldom
Never
Only
Die Zeit
Die Freizeit
Immer
Oft
Manchmal
Selten
Nie
Nur
91.3 Essen
91.3.1 Subject Pronouns in the Accusative Case
----
Me
Us
You
You All
Him
Her
It
Them
Mich
Uns
Dich
Euch
Ihn
Sie
Es
Sie
91.3.2 Food
----
Appetizers
Salad
Bread
Breadstick
Main Dishes
Sausage
368
Vorspeisen
Der Salat
Das Brot
Die Scheibe Brot
Hauptgerichte
Die Wurst
Essen
Sausages
Bratwurst
Hot Dog
Pizza
Pizzas
Hamburger
Hamburgers
With
Without
Tomatoes
Lettuce
Cheese
Pickles
Onions
Ketchup
Mustard
Chicken
Chickens
Seafood
Fish
Sides
Soup
Soups
Noodle Soup
French Fries
Fries
Pasta
Potato
Potatoes
Corn
Bean
Beans
Desserts
Gteau
Strudel
Apple strudel
Cake
Piece of Cake
Pie
Piece of Pie
Apple Pie
Ice Cream
Pudding
Cookie
Cookies
Fruit
The Meal
Lunch
Dinner
Hunger
Thirst
Die Wrste
Die Bratwurst
Das Hot Dog
Die Pizza
Die Pizzen
Der Hamburger
Die Hamburger
Mit (ignore article)
Ohne (ignore article)
Tomaten
Der Salat
Der Kse
Die Gewrzgurken
Die Zwiebeln
Der Ketchup
Der Senf
Das Hhnchen
Die Hhnchen
Die Meeresfrchte (plural)
Der Fisch
Die Beilage (singular), die Beilagen
Die Suppe
Die Suppen
Die Nudelsuppe
Die Pommes frites (plural)
Die Fritten (Informal and plural)
Die Pasta or Die Nudeln
Die Kartoffel
Die Kartoffeln
Mais
Die Bohne
Die Bohnen
Nachspeisen
Die (Sahne-)Torte
Der Strudel
Apfelstrudel
Der Kuchen
Das Stck Kuchen
Die Pastete
Das Stck Pastete
Die Apfelpastete
Das Eis
Der Pudding
Der Keks
Die Kekse
Das Obst
Das Essen
Mittagessen
Abendessen
Der Hunger
Der Durst
(plural)
91.3.3 Verbs
----
To Eat
To Drink
To Receive
To Want
Would Like
Essen
Trinken
Bekommen
Wollen
Mchten
369
Thank you
Please & You're Welcome
Thank you very much
Thanks a lot
No problem
Chinesisch Essen
Japanisch Essen
Amerikanisch Essen
Mexikanisch Essen
Arabisch Essen
Italienisch Essen
Indisch Essen
Franzsich Essen
Griechisch Essen
Durch
Fr
Gegen
Ohne
Um
Through
For
Against
Without
At, Around
91.3.7 Tastes
----
Delicious
Tasty
Juicy
Crunchy
Crispy
Spicy
Stale
Salty
Sweet
370
Lecker
Schmackhaft
Saftig
Knackig
Knusprig
Wrzig
Fade
Fad (used in
Salzig
S
Austria)
Kleidung
Bitter
Sour
Creamy
Hot
Burnt
Cold
Disgusting
Bitter
Sauer
Cremig
Hei
Angebrannt
Kalt
Schrecklich
To Pay
The Bill
Waiter
Zahlen
Die Rechnung
Der Ober
91.4 Kleidung
91.4.1 Shopping
----
Babywear
Children's Wear
Clearance Sale
Closed
Clothing
Computer Section
Cosmetics
Customer
Customer Service
Electrical Appliance
Escalator
Fashion
Furniture
Gift
Good Value (Adj.)
Groceries
Jewellery
Leather Goods
Open
Opening Hours
Present
Reduced
Sales Receipt
Souvenir
Special Offer
Sports Goods
Stationery
Summer Sale
Video Store
Winter Sale
SSV)
WSV)
371
91.4.2 Shopping 2
----
Department Store
Retail Store
The Mall
Boutique
Store
Manager
Employee
Sales Clerk
Cashier
Dressing Room
Men's Section
Women's Section
First Floor
Menswear
Second Floor
Womenswear
Third Floor
Kids Section
Fourth Floor
Electronics
Kitchenware
Fifth Floor
Lighting
Bedding
Toys
Six Floor
Food
Warenhaus
Einzelhandelsgeschft
Einkaufszentrum
Boutique
Geschft
Manager
Angestellter
Verkufer
Kassierer
Umkleidekabine
Mnnerabteilung
Frauenabteilung
Erstes Stockwerk
Mnnerkleidung
Zweiter Stock
Frauenkleidung
Dritte Stock
Kinderabteilung
Vierter Stock
Elektronik
Kchenbedarf
Fnfter Stock
Beleuchtung
Bettwsche
Spielwaren
Sechster Stock
Lebensmittel
Electronics
Television
Digital Camera
Telephone
Cell phone
Computer
Speakers
DVDs
CDs
DVD Player
CD Player
Bedding
Blankets
Pillow
Pillow Case
Sheets
Bed Skirt
372
Elektronik
Fernsehen
Digitalkamera
Telefon
Mobiltelefon, Handy
Computer, Rechner
Lautsprecher
DVD
CD
DVD-Player
CD-Player
Bettwsche
Decken
Kopfkissen
Kopfkissenbezug
Bltter
Bett-Rock
Kleidung
91.4.4 Money
----
Price
Note
Coin
1 Euro Coin
2 Euro Coin
5 Euro Note
10 Euro Note
100 Euro Note
1 Cent Coin
2 Cent Coin
5 Cent Coin
10 Cent Coin
20 Cent Coin
50 Cent Coin
Preis
Der Schein
Die Mnze
Das Eurostck
Das Zweieurostck
Der Fnfeuroschein
Der Zehneuroschein
Der Hunderteuroschein
Das Centstck
Das Zweicentstck
Das Fnfcentstck
Das Zehncentstck
Das Zwanzigcentstck
Das Fnfcentstck
91.4.5 Clothes
----
Skirt
Pullover
Scarf
Coat
Shirt
Sweater
Necktie
Jacket
Pants
Hat
Shoe
Sock
Glove
Blouse
Der
Der
Das
Der
Das
Der
Der
Die
Die
Der
Der
Die
Der
Die
Rock
Pullover
Tuch
Mantel
Hemd
Pullover
Schlips
Jacke
Hose
Hut
Schuh
Socke
Handschuh
Bluse
91.4.6 Sizes
----
Size
Color
Cotton
Leather
Rayon
Small
Medium
Large
Extra-Large
Die Gre
Die Farbe
Die Baumwolle
Das Leder
Die Kuntseide
Klein
Mittel
Gro
Extragro
373
Cheap
Expensive
Pretty
Ugly
Soft
New
Broad
Wide
Tight
Comfortable
Billig
Teuer
Schn
Hsslich
Weich
Neu
Breit
Weit
Eng
Bequem
91.4.8 Colors
----
Red
Blue
Green
Orange
Violet
Yellow
Brown
Indigo
Gray
Black
White
Rot
Blau
Grn
Orange
Veilchen
Gelb
Braun
Indigo
Grau
Schwarz
Wei
91.4.9 Verbs
----
To
To
To
To
To
To
Look
Try On
Put On
Take
Buy
Have On/Wear
Aussehen
Anprobieren
Anziehen
Nehmen
Kaufen
Anhaben or Tragen
374
Schule
Sohn
Tochter
Vater
Mutter
Grovater
Gromutter
Opa
Oma
Schwester
Bruder
Geschwister
Enkel
Enkelin
Frau
Mann
Schwiegervater
Schwiegertochter
Schwager
Schwgerin
Schwiegermutter
Schwiegersohn
Onkel
Tante
Geschenk
Son
Daughter
Father
Mother
Grandfather
Grandmother
Grandpa
Grandma
Sister
Brother
Brothers & Sisters
Grandson
Granddaughter
Wife
Husband
Father-in-Law
Daughter-in-Law
Brother-in-Law
Sister-in-Law
Mother-in-Law
Son-in-Law
Uncle
Aunt
Present
91.6 Schule
91.6.1 Verbs
---Nimmt
Lesen
Schreiben
Studieren
Lernen
Zeichnen
To
To
To
To
To
To
Take Away
Read
Write
Study
Learn
Paint
91.6.2 Classes
----
Deutsch
Englisch
Russisch
Franzsisch
Latein
Mathematik
Sport
Kunst or Zeichnen
Musik
Geschichte
Biologie
Geografie
German
English
Russian
French
Latin
Mathematics
PE or Gym
Arts
Music
History
Biology
Geography
375
Religion
Chemie
Physik
Informatik
RE or Religion
Chemistry
Physics
Computer Science
der
der
der
das
die
der
die
die
der
der
die
die
die
Radiergummi
Bleistift
Kuli/Kugelschreiber
Fach
Klasse
Lehrer
Lehrerin
Schule
Schler
Student
Stunde/Schulstunde
Pause
Schultasche
Eraser/Rubber
Pencil
Pen
Subject
Class
Teacher (male)
Teacher (female)
School
Student (High/Secondary School
Student (College/University)
Lesson
Break
Backpack
Game
Video Game
91.7.2 Parties
---der Spa
die Feier
die Party
die Musik
die Torte
das Fass
das Bier
der Schnaps
der Wein
der Weiwein
der Rotwein
Feiern
376
Fun
PartyFormal
Party
Music
Cake
Keg
Beer
Hard Liquor
Wine
White Wine
Red Wine
To Party
and Lower)
Trinken
Saufen
sich Erbrechen
Kotzen
Tanzen
der Geburtstag
Weihnachten
Ostern
das Jubilum
Drinking
To Get Drunk
To Throw Up
To Puke (slang)
To Dance
Birthday
Christmas
Easter
Anniversary
Arbeit
Arzt
Geschftsmann
Geschftsfrau
Lehrer
Polizeibeamte
Feuerwehrmann
Schauspieler
Knstler
Schriftsteller
Bankangestellter
Automechaniker
Chemiker
Beamter
Ingenieur
Landwirt
Friseur
Journalist
Rechtsanwalt
Dozent
Krankenpfleger
Rentner
Fotograf
Politiker
Brieftrger
Professor
Verkufer
Sekretr
Student
Taxifahrer
Kellner
91.8.2 Tasks
---Cleaning
Cooking
Reinigung
Kochen
377
Homework
Tasks
Hausaufgaben
Aufgaben
91.8.3 Locations
----
Germany Deutschland
Hamburg
Berlin
Frankfurt
Colonge
Munich
Hamburg
Berlin
Frankfurt
Kln
Mnchen
91.9 Wetter
91.9.1 Weather
Weather
Rain
Snow
Snow Showers
Showers
Thunder
Storm
Thunderstorm
Cloudy
Overcast
Hail
Drizzle
Thaw
Frost
Wetter
Regen
Schnee
Schneesch
Schauer
Donner
Sturm
Gewitter
Bewlkt
Bedeckt
Hagel
Nieseln
Tauen
Frost
91.9.2 Transportion
Car
Train
Trainstation
Airplane
Boat
Highway
Road
----
378
Auto
Zug
Bahnhof
Flugzeug
Boot
Landstrae
Strae
92 CONTRIBUTORS
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http:////commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:SKopp
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http:////en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Wapcaplet
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