📖 Explanation: What are Conjunctival Adverbs (Konjunktionaladverbien)?
Konjunktionaladverbien (also called Satzadverbien or Konnektoren) are words that connect two main clauses (Hauptsätze) and show the logical relationship between them (time, reason, contrast, consequence, etc.).
Unlike subordinating conjunctions (wie weil, obwohl), they do not send the verb to the end – both clauses remain main clauses with V2 word order (verb second).
Unlike coordinating conjunctions (und, aber, denn), they are more flexible in position and often require commas.
They can stand:
- At the beginning of the second clause (most common → inversion: verb immediately after).
- In the middle (after verb).
- At the end.
They are very common in written and spoken German for making texts/speech more coherent and logical.
📋 Table 1: Comparison with Conjunctions
| Type | Example | Word Order in Second Clause | Comma Needed? | Typical Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coordinating conjunction | Ich war müde, aber ich bin wach geblieben. | V2 | Yes | Between clauses |
| Subordinating conjunction | Ich bin zu Hause geblieben, weil ich müde war. | Verb at end | Yes | Starts subordinate clause |
| Konjunktionaladverb | Ich war müde, trotzdem bin ich wach geblieben. | V2 | Yes | Flexible (beginning common) |
📋 Table 2: Common Konjunktionaladverbien by Category
| Category | Konjunktionaladverbien | Meaning | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reason / Cause | deshalb, deswegen, daher, darum, aus diesem Grund | therefore, that’s why, hence | Es regnete, deshalb blieben wir zu Hause. |
| Consequence | also, folglich, demzufolge, somit | so, consequently, thus | Er hat hart gelernt, folglich hat er bestanden. |
| Contrast / Opposition | jedoch, dennoch, trotzdem, allerdings | however, nevertheless, still | Ich bin müde, trotzdem gehe ich spazieren. |
| Concession | immerhin, zumindest | at least, after all | Es ist kalt, zumindest regnet es nicht. |
| Addition / Comparison | außerdem, zudem, ebenso, ebenfalls | moreover, also, likewise | Sie spielt Klavier, ebenso ihr Bruder. |
| Condition | sonst, andernfalls | otherwise, else | Beeil dich, sonst verpasst du den Zug. |
| Time | dann, danach, zuvor, inzwischen, mittlerweile | then, afterwards, previously, meanwhile | Ich habe gegessen, danach habe ich gearbeitet. |
📋 Table 3: Position Examples with “deshalb”
| Position | Example | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| Beginning (common) | Es war kalt, deshalb habe ich eine Jacke angezogen. | It was cold, therefore I put on a jacket. |
| Middle | Es war kalt, ich habe deshalb eine Jacke angezogen. | It was cold, I therefore put on a jacket. |
| End | Es war kalt, ich habe eine Jacke deshalb angezogen. | (possible, but less common) |
🔑 Rules and Tips
- No verb to end – always V2 in both clauses.
- Comma almost always before/after (especially if at beginning or for clarity).
- If at beginning → subject-verb inversion in second clause.
- Many have synonyms (deshalb = deswegen = daher).
- Deshalb/deswegen are the most common for “therefore”.
- Trotzdem vs. obwohl: trotzdem keeps V2 (Es regnet, trotzdem gehe ich.), obwohl sends verb to end (Obwohl es regnet, gehe ich.).
- Common mistake: Treating them like subordinating conjunctions (wrong: weil es regnet, trotzdem gehe ich → verb wrong position).
- In formal writing: Prefer daher, folglich, dennoch.
- Practice: Replace simple “und/aber” with Konjunktionaladverbien to make texts more advanced.
More examples:
- Das Wetter war schlecht, dennoch hatten wir Spaß. (The weather was bad, nevertheless we had fun.)
- Ich habe keine Zeit, außerdem bin ich müde. (I have no time, moreover I’m tired.)
- Lerne fleißig, andernfalls wirst du die Prüfung nicht bestehen. (Study hard, otherwise you won’t pass the exam.)
- Zuerst habe ich gearbeitet, danach habe ich mich ausgeruht. (First I worked, then I rested.)
Konjunktionaladverbien make your German sound more connected and professional – use them to link ideas smoothly!
