Cases – Nominative, Accusative & Dative
In German, the word for ‘the’ and ‘a / an’ changes depending on the position of the noun in the sentence.
- Row 1: If the noun is at the beginning of the sentence and comes before the verb you use the word for ‘the’ or ‘a / an’ from Row 1 (nominative). This is because the noun is the subject of the sentence, i.e. it is the thing that ‘does’ the action of the verb (it is part of the snap pair).
- Row 2: If the noun is in the second part of the sentence after the verb you use the word for ‘the’ or ‘a / an’ from Row 2 (accusative). This is because the noun is the object of the sentence. The only exception to this is if you use the verb ‘sein’ – to be or ‘heissen’ – to be called.
- *We also use Row 2 if the noun comes directly after the following prepositions:
- bis – until, to, by
- durch – through, by
- entlang – along, down
- für – for
- gegen – against, for
- ohne – without
- um – around, for, at (time)
- *We also use Row 2 if the noun comes directly after the following prepositions:
- Row 3 is called the Dative Case and is used when the noun comes after the following prepositions:
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aus – from, out of
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außer – except for
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bei – at, near
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gegenüber – opposite
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mit – with
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nach – after, to
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seit – since (time), for
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von – from
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zu – at, to
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The following prepositions are a little complicated.
You use Row 2 after them if there is movement from one place to another – e.g. Ich gehe ins (in das) Kino – I go to the cinema. (you are moving from outside the cinema to inside the cinema)
You use Row 3 after them if there is no movement from one place to another – e.g. Ich bin im (in dem) Kino – I am in the cinema. (you are in the cinema and are not moving to a different place)
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- an – at, on
- auf – on
- hinter – behind
- in – in
- neben – next to
- über – above, over
- unter – under
- vor – in front of
- zwischen – between
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