Akkusativ

📖 Explanation: What is the Accusative Case (Akkusativ)?

The Accusative is the second of the four German cases, after the Nominative. It is mainly used for the direct object (Akkusativobjekt) – the person or thing that is directly affected by the verb’s action.

To find the Accusative, ask:

  • Wen? (Whom? – for people)
  • Was? (What? – for things)

The Accusative is required after certain prepositions (durch, für, gegen, ohne, um) and with some time expressions without a preposition (e.g., jeden Tag, den ganzen Monat).

Unlike Nominative, the Accusative changes the article for masculine nouns (der → den, ein → einen). Feminine, neuter, and plural stay the same.

📋 Table 1: When to Use the Accusative

UsageQuestionExample SentenceTranslation
Direct objectWen? / Was?Ich sehe den Mann. (Whom do I see? Den Mann.)I see the man.
After two-way prepositions (movement/direction)Ich gehe in das Haus. (into the house – direction)I’m going into the house.
With accusative prepositionsDas Geschenk ist für dich.The gift is for you.
Time expressions (duration)Ich lerne den ganzen Tag.I’m studying the whole day.

📋 Table 2: Definite Articles – Nominative vs. Accusative

GenderNominativeAccusativeExample (Acc.)Translation
Masculinederdenden Mannthe man (acc.)
Femininediediedie Frauthe woman
Neuterdasdasdas Kindthe child
Pluraldiediedie Kinderthe children

📋 Table 3: Indefinite Articles – Nominative vs. Accusative

GenderNominativeAccusativeExample (Acc.)Translation
Masculineeineineneinen Manna man (acc.)
Feminineeineeineeine Fraua woman
Neutereineinein Kinda child
Plural(no article)(no article)(Kinder)(some) children

📋 Table 4: Common Accusative Prepositions

PrepositionMeaningExampleTranslation
durchthrough / byIch gehe durch den Tunnel.I’m going through the tunnel.
fürforEin Geschenk für meine Freundin.A gift for my girlfriend.
gegenagainst / aroundDas Medikament gegen Kopfschmerzen.The medicine against headaches.
ohnewithoutIch gehe ohne Jacke aus.I’m going out without a jacket.
umaround / at (time)Wir treffen uns um 8 Uhr.We meet at 8 o’clock.

🔑 Rules and Tips

  • Only masculine changes in singular: Pay attention to “der/ein → den/einen”.
  • Two-way prepositions (an, auf, hinter, in, neben, über, unter, vor, zwischen):
    • Accusative = movement or direction (Wohin? – Where to?)
    • Dative = location (Wo? – Where?) Example: Ich lege das Buch auf den Tisch (onto the table – acc.) vs. Das Buch ist auf dem Tisch (on the table – dat.).
  • Many verbs always take Accusative (e.g., haben, sehen, essen, trinken, kaufen, lieben).
  • Common mistake: Using Nominative for direct objects. Wrong: Ich sehe der Mann. → Correct: Ich sehe den Mann.
  • Negation with “kein”: Follows the same rules (keinen Mann, keine Frau, etc.).

More examples:

  • Hast du einen Stift? (Do you have a pen?)
  • Ich kaufe das neue Auto. (I’m buying the new car.)
  • Wir fahren durch die Stadt. (We’re driving through the city.)

Practice identifying “Wen?” or “Was?” in sentences – soon the Accusative will feel natural!