What if I told you that every object you can think of is either masculine, feminine, neuter or plural? What if I told you you'll have to address them using the right article (der, die, das)?
Oh, and one more thing: all nouns are always capitalised!
| case | masculine | feminine | neuter | plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominativ | der Hund | die Katze | das Auto | die Freunde |
This table displays Nominativ articles, which we use when the dog, cat or car is the SUBJECT of the sentence. More specifically, they're called definite articles because we use them to refer to a specific dog, cat or car. At first, remembering the gender of every single object might feel like a lot, but hey — if you can remember your phone number, you got this 😄
If you're unsure who the subject of the sentence is, just look at the verb!
I have amazing news for you. It's not all random. Remember this is German, not French.
Certain endings almost always belong into a specific gender. Learning to recognise these patterns will help you make better guesses — but ultimately, the most reliable strategy is to learn each noun together with its article from the very beginning. Here's a short list of those endings:
| Genus | Typische Endungen | Beispiele |
|---|---|---|
| der | -er, -en, -el, -ig, -ling | der Lehrer, der Garten, der Apfel, der Honig, der Schmetterling |
| die | -e, -ung, -heit, -keit, -schaft, -ion, -tät, -ik | die Lampe, die Zeitung, die Freiheit, die Möglichkeit, die Mannschaft, die Nation, die Universität, die Musik |
| das | -chen, -lein, -ment, -um, -ma | das Mädchen, das Fräulein, das Dokument, das Zentrum, das Thema |
The best strategy for muscle memory is to find ONE word you'll be using often that has one of these endings and turn it into a REFERENCE. This way you can train your mind to think of the reference every time you encounter a new word with the same ending.
While in English most times we just add an -s to singular words (eg. the dog → the dogs), here there's a wide range of patterns, and they don't always follow a single clear logic.
Sometimes you add -e, sometimes -er, sometimes -n, sometimes nothing changes at all… and occasionally there's even a vowel shift! (eg. der Mann → die Männer) - O mein Gott...
The best gadget to find out plurals is a good dictionary app, where all you do is look up a word, and can immediately see its gender and plural. If you use Google Translate they'll deny your visa.
There are too many plural patterns, oder? Don't try to master each and every single word - focus on learning the plurals that keep popping up in YOUR OWN journey!
So far, we've only worked with der, die, das & die (plural).
In English, all four of these words translate as "the". But what about "a/an"?
Well, in German these words are gendered too. Aber natürlich!
| case | masculine | feminine | neuter | plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominativ | ein Hund | eine Katze | ein Auto | (-) Freunde |
Note that the masculine and neuter articles are the same in this table. Also note that there's no plural indefinite article:
„DAS“ is a jack of all trades, so better start drilling this into your muscle memory:
→ DAS ist…
→ DAS ist…
→ Was ist DAS?
→ DAS sind…
→ DAS sind…
→ Was ist DAS?
Was ist das?
German speakers are so pessimistic that they have two different words for negative sentences.
To know when to use „kein/e", just pretend you're a cowboy.
eg. You're no stranger / I have no time / That's no rodeo.
For everything else, use „nicht".
eg. Ich arbeite nicht / Ich arbeite nicht aus Lima / Das ist nicht gut.
| case | masculine | feminine | neuter | plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominativ | kein Hund | keine Katze | kein Auto | keine Freunde |
Have you noticed?
The only difference between this and the previous table is the k and that plural is keine.
Review the topics of this module with the flashcard app. Remember to create paper flashcards for the sentences you get wrong and need in real life!
What if I told you that you'll have to address every single object you can think of using their preferred pronoun (er, sie, es)?
Is the apple red? - Ja, Mann...He is red! Is the banana yellow? - Ja, Mann...She is yellow! Is the car blue? - Ja, Mann...It is blue.
The goal is to bypass the person vs object filter you apply when thinking in English. This can take weeks or years - It depends on the frequency of your repetitions!
German has some of the longest words in the universe. The thing is the language allows you to connect words like legos to be as specific as you desire.
For instance, if you wanted to refer to "the leg of the desk that you work at when you are staying at your summer holiday house", you could simply create a new word that summarizes all of that. The Sommerferienwohnungsschreibtischbein
This may be an extreme example, but clustering words this way is as Germanic as a Strudel. As a matter of fact, the longest official German word is:
Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz
It's the name of a law, called "Law for the delegation of monitoring tasks related to cattle meat labeling". Don't even try to pronounce it. I have and I wouldn't recommend it.
The key here is to stay calm when you come across long words, try to disassemble them to see if you recognise any words within them, and remember that each word tells you something about the following one to the right.
The very last one gives away the essence of the word and its gender.
For example, "Kaffeemaschine" is a machine (last word) that makes coffee — not a coffee that makes machines. It's also feminine, because Maschine (last word) is feminine.
Germans also like to combine verbs and nouns (e.g. waschen + Maschine → die Waschmaschine). Note that it's not „die Waschenmaschine" 😉
-S- often appears after -ung, -heit, -keit, -ion & -tum.
zB: die Wohnungstür
-ER- often appears after singular words whose plural takes -er.
zB: der Kindergarten
-N- / -EN- often appears after weak endings.
zB: die Kundennummer
| ich |
| du |
| er / sie / es |
| wir |
| ihr |
| sie / Sie |
This vertical representation of the pronouns is more important than brushing your teeth.
In case you're wondering what that capitalised „Sie“ at the bottom of the column is, it's just the formal "you".
It can refer to a singular person or to several.
So if they arrest you for listening to music after 8pm and the police officer asks you: „Woher kommen Sie?“, don't assume you're the only suspect. They could be talking to you and your flatmate simultaneously.
At any rate, how about we review pronouns and conjugation?
Do you have formal & informal pronouns in your language? In German-speaking countries both are used on a daily basis, so practicing to switch between them is nothing short of a wunderbare Idee.
In the last couple of exercises you learned some new vocabulary. Still, the most important words to learn will vary from person to person, so the best way to choose which ones to learn is by taking a look around.
This exercise consists of learning how to describe everything you can see in your office, living room, bedroom or wherever you are taking this course from. For example, the first three things I can see around me are a table, a guitar and a couch. So I would go:
Was ist das? → Das ist ein Tisch. → Er ist groß.
Was ist das? → Das ist eine Gitarre. → Sie klingt schön.
Was ist das? → Das ist ein Sofa. → Es ist breit.
Review the topics of this module with the flashcard app.
My father, my mother, my car, my friends. I AM THE OWNER, so the word is always MY. Aber nicht auf Deutsch, mein Freund... In German, we also pay attention to the gender and number of what we own:
| masculine | feminine | neuter | plural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ich | mein Vater | meine Mutter | mein Auto | meine Freunde |
The stem „mein-" is determined by the owner but the ending is determined by the gender of what I possess.
This pattern repeats for every owner, so I trust you'll be able to complete the following table:
| masculine | feminine | neuter | plural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ich | mein | meine | mein | meine |
| du | dein | |||
| er | sein | |||
| sie | ihr | |||
| es | sein | |||
| wir | unser | |||
| ihr | euer | ! | ! | |
| Sie / Sie | ihr / Ihr |
| masculine | feminine | neuter | plural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ich | mein | meine | mein | meine |
| du | dein | deine | dein | deine |
| er | sein | seine | sein | seine |
| sie | ihr | ihre | ihr | ihre |
| es | sein | seine | sein | seine |
| wir | unser | unsere | unser | unsere |
| ihr | euer | eure ! | euer | eure ! |
| Sie / Sie | ihr / Ihr | ihre / Ihre | ihr / Ihr | ihre / Ihre |
To choose the stem of the possessive article, you first need to identify the owner:
ich → mein- du → dein- er/es → sein- sie → ihr- wir → unser- ihr → euer/eur- Sie → Ihr-
To know its ending, identify the object or person possessed:
Hund? → masculine → Mein Hund
Auto? → neutrum → Mein Auto
Katze? → feminine → Meine Katze
Freunde? → plural → Meine Freunde
Make sure to ALWAYS follow these two steps. With a bit of practice, it'll just become as intuitive as forgetting to brush your teeth.
These are the verbs we generally use together with another verb (e.g. can, must, will, want, etc.)
We generally say "I can't BELIEVE it. Must you LIE to me? Will we ever LOVE each other again like we used to? - and that sort of stuff.
Note that these verbs have the same conjugation in 1st and 3rd person!
| MODAL VERBS | KÖNNEN | MÜSSEN | WOLLEN | SOLLEN | DÜRFEN | MÖGEN |
| ich | kann | muss | will | soll | darf | mag |
| du | kannst | musst | willst | sollst | darfst | magst |
| er/sie/es | kann | muss | will | soll | darf | mag |
| wir | können | müssen | wollen | sollen | dürfen | mögen |
| ihr | könnt | müsst | wollt | sollt | dürft | mögt |
| sie/Sie | können | müssen | wollen | sollen | dürfen | mögen |
🌭 Give a German speaker two verbs and they'll turn them into a sandwich before you can say „Bratwurst“:
1. Hauptsätze: modal verb in 2nd position - Ich muss morgen nicht arbeiten.
2. W-Fragen: modal verb in 2nd position - Warum musst du morgen nicht arbeiten?
3. Ja/Nein-Fragen: modal verb in 1st position - Musst du morgen nicht arbeiten?
🍋 Easy peasy, Zitrone squeezy.
Review the topics and vocabulary of this module with the flashcard app.
In this lesson we learned that in German every noun has a gender. While there's no single rule that always tells you the correct gender, there are useful clues that can guide you, like word endings. As to forming plurals, it's harder than finding a Swiss train that's late.
The distinction here is not person vs object, but rather gender-based. This distinction is important when using the words the, a/an, no and it.
| English Word | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| THE | der | die | das | die |
| A/AN | ein | eine | ein | (-) |
| NO | kein | keine | kein | keine |
| IT | er | sie | es | sie |
We also learned that to use words like my, your, his, her and so on, we need to bear in mind the gender of who we're talking about. So in order to say "My school is big" or "My dog is big" you need to consider that it's your school but also that it's feminine.
We learned that compound words are extremely common in German, and that the last noun within them determines their gender. As to forming plurals, it's harder than finding a Swiss train that's late.
We also learned that to use words like my, your, his, her and so on, we need to bear in mind the gender of who we're talking about. So in order to say "My school is big" or "My dog is big" you need to consider that it's your school but also that it's feminine.
Oh ja! Auch noch... we also took a break from the intricate world of gender and learned most modal verbs, which have an odd conjugation (given that the 1st person conjugation doesn't end in -e and the 3rd person conjugation does not end in -t, which makes them both identical). These verbs are often used together with another verb in infinitive so in classic German fashion we use both verbs to make a Brötchen, wrapping all the juicy information inside them.
If you can follow this summary and explain it in your own words, you're just a few steps away from enlightenment. So fasten your seatbelt, because in the next lesson your whole world will be turned upside down.
Right away!
Post in our Community. Using what you learned in a social environment is the final step of the learning process!
Post a photo of an object using the correct pronoun (er/sie/es). eg. Das ist meine Gitarre. SIE ist braun.
Write a sentence using a modal verb about something you want or need to do this week in German.
Draw a cheatsheet with the names and gender of the objects around you. Share a photo!
Pick five nouns you always get the gender wrong on and post your list. You're probably not alone!
What if I told you that every object you can think of is either masculine, feminine, neuter or plural? What if I told you you'll have to address them using the right article (der, die, das)?
Oh, and one more thing: all nouns are always capitalised!
| case | masculine | feminine | neuter | plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominativ | der Hund | die Katze | das Auto | die Freunde |
This table displays Nominativ articles, which we use when the dog, cat or car is the SUBJECT of the sentence. More specifically, they're called definite articles because we use them to refer to a specific dog, cat or car. At first, remembering the gender of every single object might feel like a lot, but hey — if you can remember your phone number, you got this 😄
If you're unsure who the subject of the sentence is, just look at the verb!
I have amazing news for you. It's not all random. Remember this is German, not French. Certain endings almost always belong into a specific gender. Learning to recognise these patterns will help you make better guesses — but ultimately, the most reliable strategy is to learn each noun together with its article from the very beginning. Here's a short list of those endings:
| Genus | Typische Endungen | Beispiele |
|---|---|---|
| der | -er, -en, -el, -ig, -ling | der Lehrer, der Garten, der Apfel, der Honig, der Schmetterling |
| die | -e, -ung, -heit, -keit, -schaft, -ion, -tät, -ik | die Lampe, die Zeitung, die Freiheit, die Möglichkeit, die Mannschaft, die Nation, die Universität, die Musik |
| das | -chen, -lein, -ment, -um, -ma | das Mädchen, das Fräulein, das Dokument, das Zentrum, das Thema |
The best strategy for muscle memory is to find ONE word you'll be using often that has one of these endings and turn it into a REFERENCE. This way you can train your mind to think of the reference every time you encounter a new word with the same ending.
While in English most times we just add an -s to singular words (eg. the dog → the dogs), here there's a wide range of patterns, and they don't always follow a single clear logic.
Sometimes you add -e, sometimes -er, sometimes -n, sometimes nothing changes at all… and occasionally there's even a vowel shift! (eg. der Mann → die Männer) - O mein Gott...
The best gadget to find out plurals is a good dictionary app, where all you do is look up a word, and can immediately see its gender and plural. If you use Google Translate they'll deny your visa.
There are too many plural patterns, oder? Don't try to master each and every single word - focus on learning the plurals that keep popping up in YOUR OWN journey!
So far, we've only worked with der, die, das & die (plural).
In English, all four of these words translate as "the". But what about "a/an"?
Well, in German these words are gendered too. Aber natürlich!
| case | masculine | feminine | neuter | plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominativ | ein Hund | eine Katze | ein Auto | (-) Freunde |
Note that the masculine and neuter articles are the same in this table. Also note that there's no plural indefinite article:
„DAS“ is a jack of all trades, so better start drilling this into your muscle memory:
→ DAS ist…
→ DAS ist…
→ Was ist DAS?
→ DAS sind…
→ DAS sind…
→ Was ist DAS?
Was ist das?
German speakers are so pessimistic that they have two different words for negative sentences.
To know when to use „kein/e", just pretend you're a cowboy.
eg. You're no stranger / I have no time / That's no rodeo.
For everything else, use „nicht".
eg. Ich arbeite nicht / Du kommst nicht aus Lima / Das ist nicht gut.
| case | masculine | feminine | neuter | plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominativ | kein Hund | keine Katze | kein Auto | keine Freunde |
Have you noticed?
The only difference between this and the previous table is the k and that plural is keine.
Review the topics of this module with the flashcard app. Remember to create paper flashcards for the sentences you get wrong and need in real life!
What if I told you that you'll have to address every single object you can think of using their preferred pronoun (er, sie, es)?
Is the apple red? - Ja, Mann...He is red! Is the banana yellow? - Ja, Mann...She is yellow! Is the car blue? - Ja, Mann...It is blue.
The goal is to bypass the person vs object filter you apply when thinking in English. This can take weeks or years - It depends on the frequency of your repetitions!
German has some of the longest words in the universe. The thing is the language allows you to connect words like legos to be as specific as you desire.
For instance, if you wanted to refer to "the leg of the desk that you work at when you are staying at your summer holiday house", you could simply create a new word that summarizes all of that. The Sommerferienwohnungsschreibtischbein
This may be an extreme example, but clustering words this way is as Germanic as a Strudel. As a matter of fact, the longest official German word is:
Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz
It's the name of a law, called "Law for the delegation of monitoring tasks related to cattle meat labeling". Don't even try to pronounce it. I have and I wouldn't recommend it.
The key here is to stay calm when you come across long words, try to disassemble them to see if you recognise any words within them, and remember that each word tells you something about the following one to the right.
The very last one gives away the essence of the word and its gender.
For example, "Kaffeemaschine" is a machine (last word) that makes coffee — not a coffee that makes machines. It's also feminine, because Maschine (last word) is feminine.
Germans also like to combine verbs and nouns (e.g. waschen + Maschine → die Waschmaschine). Note that it's not „die Waschenmaschine" 😉
-S- often appears after -ung, -heit, -keit, -ion & -tum.
zB: die Wohnungstür
-ER- often appears after singular words whose plural takes -er.
zB: der Kindergarten
-N- / -EN- often appears after weak endings.
zB: die Kundennummer
| ich |
| du |
| er / sie / es |
| wir |
| ihr |
| sie / Sie |
This vertical representation of the pronouns is more important than brushing your teeth.
In case you're wondering what that capitalised „Sie“ at the bottom of the column is, it's just the formal "you".
It can refer to a singular person or to several.
So if they arrest you for listening to music after 8pm and the police officer asks you: „Woher kommen Sie?“, don't assume you're the only suspect. They could be talking to you and your flatmate simultaneously.
At any rate, how about we review pronouns and conjugation?
Do you have formal & informal pronouns in your language? In German-speaking countries both are used on a daily basis, so practicing to switch between them is nothing short of a wunderbare Idee.
In the last couple of exercises you learned some new vocabulary. Still, the most important words to learn will vary from person to person, so the best way to choose which ones to learn is by taking a look around.
This exercise consists of learning how to describe everything you can see in your office, living room, bedroom or wherever you are taking this course from. For example, the first three things I can see around me are a table, a guitar and a couch. So I would go:
Was ist das? → Das ist ein Tisch. → Er ist groß.
Was ist das? → Das ist eine Gitarre. → Sie klingt schön.
Was ist das? → Das ist ein Sofa. → Es ist breit.
Review the topics of this module with the flashcard app.
My father, my mother, my car, my friends. I AM THE OWNER, so the word is always MY. Aber nicht auf Deutsch, mein Freund... In German, we also pay attention to the gender and number of what we own:
| masculine | feminine | neuter | plural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ich | mein Vater | meine Mutter | mein Auto | meine Freunde |
The stem „mein-" is determined by the owner but the ending is determined by the gender of what I possess.
This pattern repeats for every owner, so I trust you'll be able to complete the following table:
| masculine | feminine | neuter | plural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ich | mein | meine | mein | meine |
| du | dein | |||
| er | sein | |||
| sie | ihr | |||
| es | sein | |||
| wir | unser | |||
| ihr | euer | ! | ! | |
| Sie / Sie | ihr / Ihr |
To choose the stem of the possessive article, you first need to identify the owner:
ich → mein- du → dein- er/es → sein- sie → ihr- wir → unser- ihr →euer/eur- Sie → Ihr-
To know its ending, identify the object or person possessed:
Hund? → masculine → Mein Hund
Auto? → neutrum → Mein Auto
Katze? → feminine → Meine Katze
Freunde? → plural → Meine Freunde
Make sure to ALWAYS follow these two steps. With a bit of practice, it'll just become as intuitive as forgetting to brush your teeth.
These are the verbs we often use together with another verb (e.g. can, must, will, want, etc.)
We generally say "I can't BELIEVE it. Must you LIE to me? Will we ever LOVE each other again like we used to? - and that sort of stuff.
Note that these verbs have the same conjugation in 1st and 3rd person!
| MODAL VERBS | KÖNNEN | MÜSSEN | WOLLEN | SOLLEN | DÜRFEN | MÖGEN |
| ich | kann | muss | will | soll | darf | mag |
| du | kannst | musst | willst | sollst | darfst | magst |
| er/sie/es | kann | muss | will | soll | darf | mag |
| wir | können | müssen | wollen | sollen | dürfen | mögen |
| ihr | könnt | müsst | wollt | sollt | dürft | mögt |
| sie/Sie | können | müssen | wollen | sollen | dürfen | mögen |
🌭 Give a German speaker two verbs and they'll turn them into a sandwich before you can say „Bratwurst“:
1. Hauptsätze: modal verb in 2nd position - Ich muss morgen nicht arbeiten.
2. W-Fragen: modal verb in 2nd position - Warum musst du morgen nicht arbeiten?
3. Ja/Nein-Fragen: modal verb in 1st position - Musst du morgen nicht arbeiten?
🍋 Easy peasy, Zitrone squeezy.
Review the topics and vocabulary of this module with the flashcard app.
In this lesson we learned that in German every noun has a gender. While there's no single rule that always tells you the correct gender, there are useful clues that can guide you, like word endings. Remember that distinction here is not person vs object, but rather gender-based. This distinction is important when using the words the, a/an, no and it.
| English Word | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| THE | der | die | das | die |
| A/AN | ein | eine | ein | (-) |
| NO | kein | keine | kein | keine |
| IT | er | sie | es | sie |
We learned that compound words are extremely common in German, and that the last noun within them determines their gender. As to forming plurals, it's harder than finding a Swiss train that's late.
We also learned that to use words like my, your, his, her and so on, we need to bear in mind the gender of who we're talking about. So in order to say "My school is big" or "My dog is big" you need to consider that it's your school but also that it's feminine.
Oh ja! Auch noch... we also took a break from the intricate world of gender and learned most modal verbs, which have an odd conjugation (given that the 1st person conjugation doesn't end in -e and the 3rd person conjugation does not end in -t, which makes them both identical). These verbs are often used together with another verb in infinitive so in classic German fashion we use both verbs to make a Brötchen, wrapping all the juicy information inside them.
If you can follow this summary and explain it in your own words, you're just a few steps away from enlightenment. So fasten your seatbelt, because in the next lesson your whole world will be turned upside down.
Post a photo of an object using the correct pronoun (er/sie/es). eg. Das ist meine Gitarre. SIE ist braun.
Write a sentence using a modal verb about something you want or need to do this week in German.
Draw a cheatsheet with the names and gender of the objects around you. Share a photo!
Pick five nouns you always get the gender wrong on and post your list. You're probably not alone!
