Author: admin
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How to Use German Verbs with Prepositions in Sentences
Knowing that interessieren goes with für is a great start, but how do you actually put it into a sentence? Do you use the Accusative or Dative? Where does the…
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List of German Conjunctive Adverbs (With Meanings & Examples)
Conjunctive adverbs (Konjunktionaladverbien) are the “logic bridges” of the German language. They don’t just connect two sentences; they show the relationship between them—whether one thing happened because of another, or…
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Dative Case in German with Examples (Step-by-Step Guide)
If the Accusative case is the “Target” of an action, the Dative case is the “Recipient.” It tells us who is receiving something or who the action is being done…
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German Accusative Pronouns Explained (mich, dich, ihn, etc.)
In German, you don’t always want to repeat the same noun over and over. Instead of saying “I see the dog. I love the dog,” you say “I see the…
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Common Mistakes in German Adjective Declension (And Fixes)
You’ve memorized the tables, you know your genders, but you still keep getting those red marks on your German homework. Don’t worry—adjective endings (Adjektivdeklination) are notoriously tricky. The good news?…
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Difference Between Wer, Wen, and Wem in German
In English, the word “Who” is simple. Whether someone is doing the action or receiving it, we usually just say “Who.” In German, however, the word for “Who” must show…
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German Separable Verbs in Different Tenses (Present & Past)
The trickiest part of Separable Verbs (Trennbare Verben) isn’t the verb itself—it’s knowing where the prefix goes when the tense changes. Does it stay at the end? Does it merge…
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Common German Verbs with Prepositions You Must Know (A1–B1)
Learning German verbs is only half the battle. To speak correctly, you need to know which preposition follows the verb and which case (Akkusativ or Dativ) that preposition demands. Instead…
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How to Learn German Adjective Endings Fast (Simple Method)
If you look at a standard German textbook, you’ll find three massive tables for adjective endings: Strong, Weak, and Mixed. It’s enough to make anyone want to quit. But there…
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Conjunctive Adverbs vs. Conjunctions in German – What’s the Difference?
To build complex sentences in German, you need connectors. However, German categorizes these connectors into two main groups based on how they affect the Verb. If you use a “Conjunction”…
