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German (from English)

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A1.1Beginner · Foundations

1. Introduction to German

German (Deutsch) is spoken by over 100 million people as a first language & is the most widely spoken native language in the European Union. It is the official language of Germany, Austria, & Liechtenstein, & one of the four official languages of Switzerland.

Why Learn German?

  • Career opportunities — Germany has one of the world's largest economies; German proficiency is valued in engineering, science, business, & academia.
  • Cultural access — German literature, philosophy (Kant, Nietzsche, Hegel), music (Bach, Beethoven, Brahms), & film are deeply influential.
  • Travel — navigating the DACH region (Germany, Austria, Switzerland) is far richer with language skills.
  • Academic advantage — German is the second most commonly used scientific language globally.
  • Gateway language — knowing German makes learning Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, & Danish significantly easier.

What Kind of Language Is German?

German is a West Germanic language closely related to English. Many core English words share Germanic roots (Water/Wasser, House/Haus, Garden/Garten, Father/Vater). Key features to know from day one:

  • Nouns are always capitalized — every noun, always.
  • There are three grammatical genders: masculine (der), feminine (die), neuter (das).
  • German has four grammatical cases that affect article & adjective forms.
  • Word order is flexible but rule-governed — verbs have fixed positions.
  • German is highly phonetic — it is spelled almost exactly as it sounds.

Realistic Expectations

The U.S. Foreign Service Institute classifies German as a Category II language — approximately 750 class hours for professional working proficiency. Consistent daily study of 30–60 minutes will produce meaningful progress within weeks.

The DACH Varieties

RegionVarietyNotable Difference
GermanyStandard German (Hochdeutsch)The reference variety used in this guide
AustriaAustrian GermanSome vocabulary differs (e.g., Jänner vs. Januar for January)
SwitzerlandSwiss Standard GermanNo use of ß (replaced by ss); distinct vocabulary
A1.2Beginner · Building Basics

2. Pronunciation & Alphabet

German pronunciation is highly consistent — each letter represents the same sound in virtually every word. German uses the standard 26-letter Latin alphabet plus four additional characters: ä, ö, ü (umlauts) & ß (Eszett/sharp S).

The Alphabet — Letters & Sounds

Letter(s)Approximate SoundExampleMeaning
A / aLike 'ah' in 'father'Autocar
Ä / äLike 'e' in 'bed'Ähreear (of grain)
B / bLike English 'b'; at end of word like 'p'Buchbook
C / cLike 'k' before a/o/u; like 'ts' before e/iComputercomputer
D / dLike English 'd'; at end of word like 't'Dankethank you
E / eLong: like 'ay'; short: like 'e' in 'bet'essento eat
F / fLike English 'f'Frauwoman/Mrs.
G / gLike English 'g' in 'go'; at end of word like 'k'Gartengarden
H / hLike English 'h'; silent after a vowelHaushouse
I / iLike 'ee' in 'see'ichI
J / jLike English 'y' in 'yes'Jahryear
K / kLike English 'k'Kindchild
L / lLike English 'l'Liebelove
M / mLike English 'm'Muttermother
N / nLike English 'n'Nachtnight
O / oLike 'oh' but shorter & rounderOrtplace
Ö / öPursed lips, say 'e' — like French 'eu'schönbeautiful
R / rGuttural, from the back of the throatrotred
S / sBefore vowels: like 'z'; elsewhere: like 's'Sonnesun
ßLike 'ss' — used after long vowels & diphthongsStraßestreet
T / tLike English 't'Tischtable
U / uLike 'oo' in 'moon'und&
Ü / üPursed lips, say 'ee' — like French 'u'überover/above
V / vLike English 'f'Vaterfather
W / wLike English 'v'Wasserwater
Z / zLike 'ts' in 'cats'Zeittime

Key Consonant Combinations

CombinationSoundExampleMeaning
ch (after a/o/u)Like 'ch' in Scottish 'loch'Buchbook
ch (after e/i/ä/ö/ü)Soft hiss from middle of mouthichI
schLike English 'sh'Schuleschool
sp (at start)Like 'shp'sprechento speak
st (at start)Like 'sht'Stadtcity
tschLike English 'ch' in 'church'DeutschGerman
pfBoth sounds together — 'p' + 'f'Pferdhorse
quLike 'kv'Quellesource

Key rules: German 'W' = English 'V' sound. German 'V' = English 'F' sound. German 'Z' = 'ts'. German 'J' = 'Y'. Train yourself on umlauts (ä, ö, ü) early — they appear constantly.

A2.1Elementary · Everyday Language

3. Grammar Foundations

German grammar has a reputation for difficulty, but its rules are consistent & logical. Mastering a few key concepts early will unlock your ability to construct correct sentences quickly.

Grammatical Gender

Every German noun has one of three genders: masculine ( der ), feminine ( die ), or neuter ( das ). Gender must generally be memorized with the noun.

Memory strategy: Always learn the article with the noun. Never memorize "Hund" — memorize "der Hund." This habit saves enormous effort once cases are introduced.

EndingUsually...Examples
-er, -en, -elMasculineder Lehrer (teacher), der Wagen (car)
-ung, -heit, -keit, -schaft, -tionFemininedie Zeitung (newspaper), die Freiheit (freedom)
-chen, -lein (diminutives)Neuterdas Mädchen (girl), das Büchlein (small book)
-ium, -um, -mentNeuterdas Gymnasium, das Argument

Definite Articles (The) — All Cases

GenderNominativeAccusativeDativeGenitive
Masculinederdendemdes
Femininediediederder
Neuterdasdasdemdes
Plural (all)diediedender

Indefinite Articles (A / An) — All Cases

GenderNominativeAccusativeDativeGenitive
Masculineeineineneinemeines
Feminineeineeineeinereiner
Neutereineineinemeines
Plural

Personal Pronouns

PersonGermanEnglish
1st singularichI
2nd singular (informal)duyou
2nd singular (formal)Sieyou (polite)
3rd singular masc.erhe
3rd singular fem.sieshe
3rd singular neuteresit
1st pluralwirwe
2nd plural (informal)ihryou (plural)
2nd plural (formal)Sieyou (formal plural)
3rd pluralsiethey

Use du with friends, family, & children. Use Sie (always capitalized) with strangers, professionals, & anyone older unless invited otherwise.

Noun Plurals — Common Patterns

German plurals are irregular & must be memorized. Common patterns:

PatternSingularPluralNotes
-e endingder Tischdie TischeCommon for masculine nouns
-er ending (often with umlaut)das Kinddie KinderCommon for neuter nouns
-en / -n endingdie Fraudie FrauenVery common for feminine nouns
-s endingdas Autodie AutosMostly loanwords
Umlaut onlyder Vaterdie VäterVowel change only
No changedas Mädchendie MädchenWords ending in -chen/-lein
A2.2Elementary · Expanding Range

4. Common Sentence Structures

The V2 Rule — Verb Always Second in Main Clauses

In a German main clause, the conjugated verb is always the second element . The first element can be the subject, an object, or a time/place expression — but the verb must be second.

Position 1Position 2 (Verb)Rest of Sentence
Ichtrinkejeden Morgen Kaffee. (I drink coffee every morning.)
Jeden Morgentrinkeich Kaffee. (Every morning I drink coffee.)
Kaffeetrinkeich jeden Morgen. (Coffee, I drink every morning.)

Time — Manner — Place (TMP) Order

When multiple adverbials appear, the default order is: Time first, then Manner , then Place .

Ich fahre morgen (time) mit dem Bus (manner) in die Stadt (place). → I am going into the city tomorrow by bus.

Questions — Yes/No & W-Questions

Yes/No Questions — simply invert the subject & verb: Trinkst du Kaffee? — Do you drink coffee? Bist du müde? — Are you tired?

Question WordMeaningExampleTranslation
WerWhoWer ist das?Who is that?
WasWhatWas machst du?What are you doing?
WoWhere (location)Wo wohnst du?Where do you live?
WohinWhere (direction)Wohin gehst du?Where are you going?
WoherWhere (from)Woher kommst du?Where are you from?
WannWhenWann kommst du?When are you coming?
WarumWhyWarum weinst du?Why are you crying?
WieHowWie geht es dir?How are you?
Wie vielHow muchWie viel kostet das?How much does that cost?
Welch-WhichWelches Buch liest du?Which book are you reading?

Negation — nicht & kein

  • nicht — negates verbs, adjectives, & nouns with definite articles. Placed after the direct object & before adjectives/adverbs: Ich schlafe nicht. (I'm not sleeping.)
  • kein — negates nouns that would use ein/eine: Ich habe kein Auto. (I don't have a car.)

Subordinate Clauses — Verb to the End

In subordinate clauses (introduced by dass, weil, wenn, ob), the conjugated verb moves to the very end.

Ich weiß, dass er kommt. — I know that he is coming. Ich gehe nicht, weil ich müde bin. — I'm not going because I'm tired.

5. Everyday Vocabulary

Focus on the most frequently used words first — the top 500–1,000 words cover roughly 80% of everyday speech.

Numbers 0–1,000,000

NumberGermanNumberGerman
0null10zehn
1eins / ein-11elf
2zwei12zwölf
3drei13dreizehn
4vier20zwanzig
5fünf21einundzwanzig
6sechs30dreißig
7sieben100hundert
8acht1,000tausend
9neun1,000,000eine Million

Pattern 21–99: units before tens, joined with -und-: einundzwanzig (21), dreiundvierzig (43).

Days, Months & Seasons

WeekdayGermanMonthGerman
MondayMontagJanuaryJanuar
TuesdayDienstagFebruaryFebruar
WednesdayMittwochMarchMärz
ThursdayDonnerstagAprilApril
FridayFreitagMayMai
SaturdaySamstagJuneJuni
SundaySonntagJulyJuli
AugustAugust
SeptemberSeptember
OctoberOktober
NovemberNovember
DecemberDezember
SeasonGermanExpressionTranslation
Springder Frühlingim Frühlingin spring
Summerder Sommerim Sommerin summer
Autumnder Herbstim Herbstin autumn
Winterder Winterim Winterin winter

Colors

ColorGermanColorGerman
redrotorangeorange
blueblaupurplelila / violett
greengrünpinkrosa
yellowgelbbrownbraun
whiteweißblackschwarz
graygraugoldgolden

Essential Nouns by Category

Family

EnglishGermanEnglishGerman
motherdie Mutterfatherder Vater
sisterdie Schwesterbrotherder Bruder
daughterdie Tochtersonder Sohn
grandmotherdie Großmuttergrandfatherder Großvater
wifedie Frauhusbandder Mann
childdas Kindbabydas Baby

Food & Drink

EnglishGermanEnglishGerman
breaddas Brotwaterdas Wasser
meatdas Fleischcoffeeder Kaffee
fishder Fischteader Tee
vegetabledas Gemüsebeerdas Bier
fruitdas Obstwineder Wein
soupdie Suppejuiceder Saft
cakeder Kuchenmilkdie Milch
B1.1Intermediate · Independent Use

6. Verb Conjugations

Regular Verb Conjugation — Present Tense

Remove the infinitive ending -en & add the appropriate ending:

PronounEndingmachen (to do)spielen (to play)kaufen (to buy)
ich-emachespielekaufe
du-stmachstspielstkaufst
er/sie/es-tmachtspieltkauft
wir-enmachenspielenkaufen
ihr-tmachtspieltkauft
sie/Sie-enmachenspielenkaufen

sein (to be) — All Tenses

PronounPresentPast (Präteritum)Perfect
ichbinwarbin gewesen
dubistwarstbist gewesen
er/sie/esistwarist gewesen
wirsindwarensind gewesen
ihrseidwartseid gewesen
sie/Siesindwarensind gewesen

haben (to have) — All Tenses

PronounPresentPast (Präteritum)Perfect
ichhabehattehabe gehabt
duhasthattesthast gehabt
er/sie/eshathattehat gehabt
wirhabenhattenhaben gehabt
ihrhabthattethabt gehabt
sie/Siehabenhattenhaben gehabt

7. Common Phrases & Dialogues

Greetings & Farewells

GermanEnglish
Guten MorgenGood morning
Guten TagGood day / Hello (formal)
Guten AbendGood evening
Hallo / HiHello / Hi (informal)
Tschüss / TschauBye (informal)
Auf WiedersehenGoodbye (formal)
Bis späterSee you later
Bis morgenSee you tomorrow
Gute NachtGood night

Introductions & Basic Conversation

GermanEnglish
Wie heißen Sie? / Wie heißt du?What is your name? (formal / informal)
Ich heiße…My name is…
Wie geht es Ihnen? / Wie geht es dir?How are you? (formal / informal)
Mir geht es gut, danke.I'm fine, thank you.
Woher kommen Sie? / Woher kommst du?Where are you from?
Ich komme aus…I come from…
Wo wohnen Sie? / Wo wohnst du?Where do you live?
Ich wohne in…I live in…
Sprechen Sie Englisch?Do you speak English?
Ich spreche ein bisschen Deutsch.I speak a little German.
Können Sie das wiederholen?Can you repeat that?
Ich verstehe nicht.I don't understand.
BittePlease / You're welcome
Danke (schön)Thank you (very much)
Entschuldigung / Entschuldigen SieExcuse me / I'm sorry

Sample Dialogue — At a Restaurant

GermanEnglish
Einen Tisch für zwei, bitte.A table for two, please.
Was darf ich Ihnen bringen?What can I bring you?
Ich hätte gerne…I would like…
Was empfehlen Sie?What do you recommend?
Die Speisekarte, bitte.The menu, please.
Ich bin Vegetarier/Vegetarierin.I am vegetarian. (m/f)
Die Rechnung, bitte.The bill, please.
Das war sehr lecker.That was very delicious.
B1.2Intermediate · Connected Language

8. Apps & Tools

  • LingQ — best for reading & listening, particularly for intermediate learners. Combines a multilingual dictionary, native-speaker audio, & an integrated SRS. Supports EPUB import. Recommended for tablet use. Reach B1 before relying on it heavily.
  • Anki — the most effective memorization tool available, using the SM2 or FSRS algorithm. Applicable to any memorization-heavy subject. Review the AnKing YouTube channel for setup guidance.
  • Language Reactor — excellent for consuming YouTube videos & generating SRS cards from subtitles.
  • Slowly — find a German pen pal & practice writing; a good long-term complement to formal study.
  • Kobo — the most widely used e-reader in Germany. Also available in the US. Pair with Calibre (free) for e-book file management & device syncing.
  • Duolingo — gamified & good for habit-building; best used as a supplement, not a primary course.

9. Books

Beginner & Intermediate Reading

  • Project Gutenberg — free German e-book database
  • Short Stories in German for Beginners (2018) — Olly Richards
  • Short Stories in German — Intermediate (2018) — Olly Richards
  • 101 Conversations in Intermediate German (2021) — Olly Richards
  • Momo (1973) — Michael Ende
  • Harry Potter und der Stein der Weisen (1997) — J.K. Rowling (excellent for intermediate learners)

Graphic Novels

  • Maus: A Survivor's Tale, Vol. 1 (1986) — Art Spiegelman
  • Maus: A Survivor's Tale, Vol. 2 (1992) — Art Spiegelman

Classic German Literature

  • Faust: Eine Tragödie (Teile I & II) — Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1808/1832)
  • Die Leiden des jungen Werthers — Goethe
  • Die Räuber — Friedrich Schiller
  • Woyzeck — Georg Büchner
  • Die Verwandlung — Franz Kafka
  • Der Prozeß / Das Schloss — Franz Kafka
  • Berlin Alexanderplatz (1929) — Alfred Döblin
  • Der Zauberberg (The Magic Mountain) (1924) — Thomas Mann
  • Buddenbrooks — Thomas Mann
  • Doktor Faustus (1947) — Thomas Mann
  • Die Blechtrommel (The Tin Drum) (1959) — Günter Grass
  • Demian (1919) / Siddhartha (1922) — Hermann Hesse
  • Zur Genealogie der Moral — Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Also sprach Zarathustra (1883) — Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Effi Briest (1895) — Theodor Fontane
  • Die Marquise von O… — Heinrich von Kleist
  • Simplicius Simplicissimus — Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen

10. Audio & Listening

  • Beginner — DW — Deutsch lernen (Easy German Audio)
  • Beginner — Super Easy German (YouTube Playlist)
  • Beginner — Slow Easy German (YouTube Playlist)
  • Intermediate — Easy German — street interviews with German & English subtitles
  • Intermediate — Kurzgesagt — Dinge Erklärt — animated explainer videos in German
  • Advanced — TED(x) Talks in German

11. Courses & Tutors

Online Tutors

  • iTalki — recommended platform for one-on-one lessons. Recommended tutors: Erkan, Jonathan aus Frankfurt, Daniel aus Berlin, Patrick aus Hannover, Jennifer aus Kassel.
  • Preply — comparable to iTalki.

Institutional Courses

  • Goethe-Institut Online — structured courses from the official German cultural institute.
  • Volkshochschule (VHS) — affordable in-person & online classes available across Germany ( vhs.de ). Branches: Berlin , Frankfurt , Hamburg , Munich . May require German residence permit.
  • Schritte Plus — Deutsch als Fremdsprache — free online structured course access.

Textbooks

  • Neue Horizonte — David Dollenmayer (well-regarded structured textbook)
B2.1Upper-Intermediate · Fluency & Nuance

12. Films

Watching German-language film is one of the most effective ways to build listening comprehension & cultural understanding simultaneously.

Classic Silent Film Era (1913–1932)

  • Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari (1920) — Robert Wiene
  • Nosferatu (1922) — F.W. Murnau
  • Dr. Mabuse (1922) — Fritz Lang
  • Die Nibelungen: Siegfried (1924) — Fritz Lang
  • Der letzte Mann (The Last Laugh) (1924) — F.W. Murnau
  • Faust (1926) — F.W. Murnau
  • Metropolis (1927) — Fritz Lang
  • Spione (Spies) (1928) — Fritz Lang
  • Pandoras Box (1929) — Georg Wilhelm Pabst
  • Die Frau im Mond (Woman in the Moon) (1929) — Fritz Lang
  • Menschen am Sonntag (People on Sunday) (1930) — Robert Siodmak

Classic & Contemporary German Cinema

  • M (1931) — Fritz Lang
  • Im Westen nichts Neues (All Quiet on the Western Front) (1930/1979)
  • Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes (1972) — Werner Herzog
  • Die bitteren Tränen der Petra von Kant (1972) — R.W. Fassbinder
  • Angst Essen Seele Auf (1974) — Rainer Werner Fassbinder
  • Stroszek (1977) — Werner Herzog
  • Die Ehe der Maria Braun (1979) — Rainer Werner Fassbinder
  • Woyzeck (1979) — Werner Herzog
  • Nosferatu — Phantom der Nacht (1979) — Werner Herzog
  • Das Boot (1981) — Wolfgang Petersen
  • Mephisto (1981) — István Szabó
  • Wir Kinder vom Bahnhof Zoo (1981) — Ulrich Edel
  • Fitzcarraldo (1982) — Werner Herzog
  • Europa, Europa (1990) — Agnieszka Holland
  • Stalingrad (1993) — Joseph Vilsmaier
  • Lola Rennt (Run Lola Run) (1998) — Tom Tykwer
  • Good Bye Lenin! (2003) — Wolfgang Becker
  • Der Untergang (Downfall) (2004) — Oliver Hirschbiegel
  • Im Westen nichts Neues (2022) — Edward Berger (Netflix — Academy Award winner)

German Netflix Series

  • Dark — highly acclaimed sci-fi thriller in German
  • Babylon Berlin — Weimar Republic crime drama
  • How to Sell Drugs Online (Fast) — modern comedy-drama
  • Biohackers — science thriller

Use Language Reactor to add dual subtitles & pop-up definitions while watching.

13. Music

Contemporary German Bands & Artists

Immersive listening supports tonal & phonological awareness. Use Spotify lyrics for passive study.

Antilopen Gang · Danger Dan · Kraftklub · Juju · Apache 207 · Ohrbooten · AnnenMayKantereit · Clueso · Mark Forster · Max Giesinger · Von Wegen Lisbeth · Silbermond · Anna Depenbusch · Nena · Faber · Sido · SDP · Alligatoah · Giant Rooks · Ion Miles · Die Lieferanten · Miwata · Capital Bra · Madsen · JEREMIAS

German Multi-Genre Spotify Mega Playlist — a broad playlist spanning modern pop, rap, indie rock, alternative, & hip hop. Good for staying connected to contemporary German music culture.

Classical Music

  • Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750, Eisenach)
  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791, Salzburg)
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827, Bonn)
  • Franz Schubert (1797–1828, Vienna)
  • Robert Schumann (1810–1856, Zwickau)

14. YouTube & Video

Interactive Learning Series

  • Ticket nach Berlin — Goethe-Institut video series with free PDF worksheets. Create an account to access materials.

YouTube Playlists by Level

  • A1 Easy German A1 Playlist
  • A2 Easy German A2 Playlist
  • B1 Easy German B1 Playlist
  • C1 Easy German C1 Playlist
  • All Kurzgesagt — Dinge Erklärt
  • All TED(x) Talks in German

15. Instagram

Filling your feed with German content is low-effort, high-frequency language exposure.

HandleFocus
@deutsch_mit_artyDeutsch mit Arty — grammar & vocabulary lessons
@deutsch_erfolgreichDeutsch mit Jannik
@deutschmmDeutsch mit Maarten
@expertlygermanDeutsch mit Tom
@dw_deutschlernenDW — Deutsche Welle official
@deutschland_deOfficial Germany account — culture & current affairs
@vice_deVICE Deutschland — news, culture
@fxrkanFurkan — short reels, colloquial speech
@phillip.uckelGerman comedian — standup reels
B2.2Upper-Intermediate · Consolidation

16. Dictionaries

  • dict.cc — comprehensive German-English dictionary with community examples & audio.
  • LEO Dictionary — widely trusted, with grammar tables & forum discussions.
  • Duden — the definitive German-language monolingual dictionary (authoritative source).

17. Grammar Books & Workbooks

  • Hammer's German Grammar & Usage — Martin Durrell. The definitive English-language German grammar reference. Highly recommended for serious learners.
  • Neue Horizonte — David Dollenmayer. Structured textbook for beginners & intermediate learners.
  • Schritte Plus — Deutsch als Fremdsprache — free online access; structured course material.
  • Deutsch lernen mit DW — free structured online courses from Deutsche Welle, A1 through C1.

18. Study Schedule & Strategy

Core Principles

  • Study every day, even if only briefly. Consistency outweighs session length.
  • Prioritize speaking & listening before reading & writing.
  • Commit to one course or textbook before switching to another.
  • Grammar study should complement input (reading/listening), not replace it.

Sample Beginner Plan — 4–5 hours/week

DayActivityDuration
MondayAnki review + 1 grammar topic30–40 min
TuesdayAnki review + listening (Easy German / DW)30 min
WednesdayAnki review + speaking practice / iTalki lesson45–60 min
ThursdayAnki review + reading (short story or graded text)30 min
FridayAnki review + vocabulary list review30 min
SaturdayExtended input — German TV series or film60+ min
SundayLight review or rest15–20 min

Progression Roadmap — A1 through B1

LevelTimelineFocus
A1 Absolute BeginnerMonths 1–2Alphabet, basic greetings, numbers, present tense regular verbs, simple vocabulary (family, food, colors)
A2 ElementaryMonths 3–4Past tense (Perfekt), modal verbs, separable verbs, basic sentence structures, expanding vocabulary
B1 IntermediateMonths 5–8Subordinate clauses, dative/genitive cases, Konjunktiv II, reading native-level short texts, sustained conversation

19. Scholarships

Germany-Specific

  • CBYX for Young Professionals ⭐ — Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange. Highly recommended for anyone with a serious interest in Germany. The author is an alumnus of the high school version of this program & can speak to the application experience.

Multi-Country Scholarships Including Germany

  • Fulbright Scholarship
  • Rotary Club Scholarship

Other International Scholarships

  • YES Abroad
  • NSLI-Y

20. Miscellaneous

  • Tim Ferriss — How to Learn (but Not Master) a Language in 1 Hour
  • A Review of German Grammar — Dartmouth
  • German Slang Words & Phrases
  • 111 German Idioms — Germans are particularly fond of idiomatic language.
  • Library Genesis — free e-book repository; filter by German & EPUB format for LingQ-compatible texts.
  • r/LearnGerman — active community for questions, resources, & study advice.
  • Germany Visa Information / Skilled Worker Visa Docs

For feedback, additional resources, or questions: stevelegg2000@gmail.com

21. Grammar in Depth: A Sourced Reference

This section deepens the grammar foundations above with a concise, sourced reference. The German terminology, examples, and category definitions here follow Martin Durrell's standard reference grammar, Hammer's German Grammar and Usage (6th ed.).1 It is offered as orientation for intermediate learners (roughly CEFR B1–B2) who want precise terms for what they are already producing.

The Four Cases (die vier Fälle)

German marks the function of a noun phrase in the clause through case; the language has four cases, traditionally given both Latinate and German names.2 Each is shown by the inflection of the determiner and adjective in the noun phrase rather than (mostly) on the noun itself.

Case (English)German termTypical functionExample
NominativeNominativ / Werfallsubject of the verbder Hund (the dog) — der Hund bellt
AccusativeAkkusativ / Wenfalldirect object; after certain prepositionsden Hund — Ich sehe den Hund; durch den Wald
GenitiveGenitiv / Wesfallpossession; linking nouns; a few prepositionsdes Hundes — das Buch meines Vaters; trotz des Wetters
DativeDativ / Wemfallindirect object; after many prepositionsdem Hund — Ich helfe meinem Bruder; mit den Kindern

Grammatical Gender (Genus)

German nouns are classified into three genders — masculine (Maskulinum), feminine (Femininum) and neuter (Neutrum) — and the gender of a noun is shown by the endings of the determiner or adjective in the noun phrase: der Mann, diese Frau, klares Wasser.1 Because gender is not predictable from meaning, learn each noun together with its definite article.

Strong vs. Weak Verbs and the Principal Parts (Stammformen)

Weak verbs (schwache Verben) are the regular verbs of German: they form the past tense with the ending -te and the past participle with -t — machen – machte – gemacht. Strong verbs (starke Verben) change their stem vowel in the past tense (and often the participle) and take -en in the participle — bitten – bat – gebeten.1 The three key forms — infinitive, past tense, past participle — are the principal parts (Stammformen), and most other forms are built from them: machen – machte – gemacht; kommen – kam – gekommen.

Separable and Inseparable Verbs

A separable verb (trennbares Verb) has a stressed prefix that detaches from the finite verb in main clauses and goes to the end of the clause — ankommen: 'Wir kommen morgen um vierzehn Uhr in Dresden an.'3 An inseparable verb (untrennbares Verb) has an unstressed prefix that always stays attached: besuchen, erwarten, verstehen.3 Knowing which prefixes are separable (e.g. an-, auf-, ein-, mit-) versus inseparable (be-, er-, ver-, ent-) prevents one of the most common intermediate word-order mistakes.

The Verbal Bracket (Satzklammer / Verbalklammer)

A defining feature of German clause structure is the 'bracket' construction, in which most of the words and phrases of a clause are bracketed between two parts of the verb: 'Wir [kommen um 17 Uhr in Innsbruck an].'4 The same frame appears with compound tenses and modals (e.g. 'Sie hat einen Hund gekauft'), so learning to hold the second verbal element until the end of the clause is essential for natural German.

Mood: the Subjunctive (Konjunktiv I & II)

Beyond the indicative and imperative, German has a subjunctive mood used when something may not be factual. There are two forms: Konjunktiv I is chiefly used to mark indirect speech — 'Er sagte, er sei heute krank' — while Konjunktiv II indicates unreal conditions — 'Ich würde lachen, wenn sie käme.'5 The würde-form (a compound of würde + infinitive) is the everyday way to express the conditional.

Modal Particles (Modalpartikeln)

German makes heavy use of small, hard-to-translate words that signal the speaker's attitude to what is said — the modal particles (Chapter 9). For example, 'Es gibt ja hier nur zwei gute Restaurants' assumes shared agreement, while 'Das Bier ist aber kalt!' expresses surprise.1 These particles (ja, doch, mal, eben, halt, aber, wohl) are a hallmark of fluent, idiomatic speech rather than optional filler.

Word Order and the Topic (Topik/Thema)

In a German main clause the finite verb stands in second position, and the first element — the topic — is whatever the speaker chooses to begin with: 'Max ist gestern nach Rom gefahren'; 'Gestern ist Max nach Rom gefahren'; 'Nach Rom ist Max gestern gefahren.'6 Fronting an adverb or object therefore pushes the subject after the verb (inversion); the verb itself does not move from second position.

For the full treatment of any point above — including the many sub-rules, exceptions and register notes — consult the cited reference directly; it remains the most authoritative English-language account of German grammar and usage.1