In German, when a noun becomes the Direct Object (the target of an action), its “identity card”—the article—changes.


The most important thing to remember is the “Masculine Rule.” In the Accusative case, Feminine, Neuter, and Plural articles stay exactly the same as they were in the Nominative. Only the Masculine gender changes.
Definite Articles (The “The”)
When you are talking about a specific item, the masculine der transforms into den.
| Gender | Nominative (Subject) | Accusative (Object) | The Change |
| Masculine | der | den | -en |
| Feminine | die | die | No change |
| Neuter | das | das | No change |
| Plural | die | die | No change |
- Nominative: Der Apfel ist rot. (The apple is the subject).
- Accusative: Ich esse den Apfel. (The apple is being eaten).
Indefinite Articles (A / An)
The same rule applies to “a” or “an.” The masculine ein adds an -en ending to become einen.
| Gender | Nominative (Subject) | Accusative (Object) | The Change |
| Masculine | ein | einen | -en |
| Feminine | eine | eine | No change |
| Neuter | ein | ein | No change |
- Nominative: Ein Hund spielt. (A dog plays).
- Accusative: Ich sehe einen Hund. (I see a dog).
The “N-Signal” Memory Trick
Think of the Accusative as the “N-Case.” When you see a masculine noun being “targeted” by a verb, just remember to add an -n:
- der $\rightarrow$ den
- ein $\rightarrow$ einen
Wait! What about the others?
If you are talking about a woman (die Frau), a child (das Kind), or books (die Bücher), you don’t have to change a single letter. They are immune to the Accusative change.
Final Thoughts
The Accusative case is often the first “wall” students hit, but once you realize that only the masculine gender changes, the wall becomes a small step. Master the der $\rightarrow$ den shift, and you have mastered 90% of Accusative articles!
