Author: admin
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Top German Verbs That Always Use the Dative Case
In German, most verbs use the Accusative case for their objects. However, there is a specific group of verbs that always require the Dative case. Even if it feels like…
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W-Questions in German: Examples with Simple Sentences
To start a conversation in German, you need to know how to ask for information. These are called W-Fragen (W-Questions) because almost all of them start with the letter W.…
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Direct Objects in German Explained (With Accusative Case)
In English, we identify the “receiver” of an action mostly by where it sits in the sentence. In German, we use the Accusative Case to label it. Understanding the Direct…
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How to Use Separable Verbs in German Sentences
Using a separable verb (trennbares Verb) feels a bit like performing a magic trick. You take a verb like anrufen (to call), chop it in half, and put the “tail”…
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German Dative Pronouns Explained (mir, dir, ihm, etc.)
In German, when a person is the indirect object (the recipient) of an action, we don’t just use their name or a standard pronoun. We must use the Dative Pronoun.…
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Top German Verbs That Always Use the Dative Case
In German, most verbs use the Accusative case for their objects. However, there is a specific group of verbs that always require the Dative case. Even if it feels like…
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German Verbs with Prepositions + Cases (Akkusativ or Dativ?)
When you learn a German verb, you often learn a preposition to go with it. But then comes the hard part: Which case follows? In German, the case isn’t chosen…
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German Word Order with Conjunctive Adverbs (Easy Rules & Examples)
In German, Conjunctive Adverbs (Konjunktionaladverbien) like deshalb (therefore), trotzdem (nevertheless), and außerdem (besides) are used to link two independent ideas. The biggest challenge isn’t the meaning of the words—it’s the…
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German Adjective Endings Table (Easy to Understand)
Learning German adjective endings (Adjektivdeklination) doesn’t have to be a nightmare. The secret is knowing which Article stands before the adjective. There are three main tables you need to know.…
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German Word Order in Questions (Easy Rules & Examples)
One of the biggest differences between English and German is how we build questions. In English, we often need a “helper” verb like do or did. In German, you don’t…
