📖 Explanation: What are Personal Pronouns?
Personal pronouns (Personalpronomen) replace nouns to avoid repetition. They refer to people, things, or situations we talk about.


In German, pronouns change depending on the case:
- Nominative (Nominativ): for the subject (who does the action).
- Accusative (Akkusativ): for the direct object (whom/what the action affects directly).
- Dative (Dativ): for the indirect object (to/for whom the action is done).
There are also different forms for singular/plural and the polite “you” (Sie – always capitalized).
German has three genders in 3rd person singular: er (masculine), sie (feminine), es (neuter). The impersonal “es” is used in expressions like weather: Es regnet. (It is raining.)
📋 Table: Personal Pronouns Overview
| Person | Pronoun (English) |
|---|---|
| 1st person singular | ich (I) |
| 2nd person singular (informal) | du (you) |
| 3rd person singular | er / sie / es (he / she / it) |
| 1st person plural | wir (we) |
| 2nd person plural (informal) | ihr (you) |
| 3rd person plural | sie (they) |
| Polite form (singular & plural) | Sie (you) |
📋 Table: Declension of Personal Pronouns (changes by case)
| Nominative (subject) | Accusative (direct object) | Dative (indirect object) |
|---|---|---|
| ich | mich | mir |
| du | dich | dir |
| er | ihn | ihm |
| sie (she) | sie | ihr |
| es | es | ihm |
| wir | uns | uns |
| ihr | euch | euch |
| sie (they) | sie | ihnen |
| Sie (polite) | Sie | Ihnen |
🔑 Rules and Tips for Usage
- Nominative: Used when the pronoun is the subject. Example: Ich gehe zur Schule. (I am going to school.) Du bist mein Freund. (You are my friend.)
- Accusative: Used for direct objects (answers “whom?” or “what?”). Example: Ich sehe dich. (I see you.) Wrong: Er hilft ihn. Correct: Er hilft ihm. (helfen always takes dative)
- Dative: Very common in German! Used after certain verbs (helfen, geben, sagen, zeigen, etc.), prepositions, or as indirect object. Example: Ich gebe dir ein Buch. (I give you a book. – dir = to you) Sie hilft mir. (She helps me.)
- Important notes:
- sie can mean “she”, “they”, or “it” (formal) – context tells you which!
- Sie (capital S) is always the polite “you”. Its forms are:
- Nominative: Sie
- Accusative: Sie
- Dative: Ihnen
- No gender distinction in 1st and 2nd person.
- “es” stays the same in nominative and accusative. In dative, it becomes “ihm”.
- Common examples in sentences:
- Er liebt sie. (He loves her.)
- Wir treffen euch morgen. (We meet you tomorrow.)
- Kannst du mir helfen? (Can you help me?)
- Es regnet heute. (It is raining today.)
- Entschuldigung, kennen Sie den Weg? (Excuse me, do you know the way? – polite)
Practice by replacing nouns in sentences with pronouns – it will quickly become natural!
