Difference between revisions of "Language/German/Grammar/Cases"

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[[File:learn-german-polyglot-club2.jpg|thumb]]
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.


Hello everybody,
Hello everybody,


In today's lesson you will learn how to use '''¨CASES¨''' in German.
In today's lesson you will learn how to use '''¨CASES¨''' in German.


There are four cases in German: nominative, accusative, dative, genitive.
* Nominative (Nom. or N) indicates the subject of a verb, such as "the monkey" in "'''The monkey''' eats a banana." "'''Der Affe''' isst eine Banane."
* Accusative (Akk. or A) indicates the direct object, such as "a pen" in "He bought '''a pen'''." "Er hat '''einen Stift''' gekauft."
* Dative (Dat. or D) indicates the indirect object, such as "him" in "His father will give '''him''' a tricycle." "Sein Vater wird '''ihm''' ein Dreirad geben."
* Genitive (Gen. or G) usually indicates the possessor of something, such as "my mom" in "This is a helicopter of '''my mom'''." "Das ist ein Hubschrauber '''meiner Mutter'''."
After you've delved into this material, you may find these associated topics worth exploring: [[Language/Swiss-german/Grammar/Gender|Gender]], [[Language/German/Grammar/Be-Polite|Be Polite]], [[Language/German/Grammar/Past-Tense---Part-1---Perfect-Tense|Past Tense Part 1 Perfect Tense]] & [[Language/German/Grammar/Talking-About-Obligations|Talking About Obligations]].
== '''Prepositions''' ==
'''may require accusative, dative or genitive objects. They can be found here:'''
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German/Grammar/Prepositions_and_Postpositions.
== '''Verbs''' ==
may require accusative, dative or genitive objects.
== '''Dative verbs''' ==
can be found here:
http://germanforenglishspeakers.com/reference/dative-verbs
== '''Genitive verbs''' ==
can be found here:
https://easy-deutsch.de/en/verbs/verbs-with-complements/genitive/


.
You can assume other verbs are all accusative, if you don't want to bother search each new verb you meet.
 
English Wikibooks has an article on: [[wikibooks:German/Grammar/Cases|cases]].
 
==In other languages==


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
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'''da minha mãe'''
'''da minha mãe'''
|}
|}
.
There are four cases in German: nominative, accusative, dative, genitive.
* Nominative (Nom. or N) indicates the subject of a verb, such as "the monkey" in "'''The monkey''' eats a banana." "'''Der Affe''' isst eine Banane."
* Accusative (Akk. or A) indicates the direct object, such as "a pen" in "He bought '''a pen'''." "Er hat '''einen Stift''' gekauft."
* Dative (Dat. or D) indicates the indirect object, such as "him" in "His father will give '''him''' a tricycle." "Sein Vater wird '''ihm''' ein Dreirad geben."
* Genitive (Gen. or G) usually indicates the possessor of something, such as "my mom" in "This is a helicopter of '''my mom'''." "Das ist ein Hubschrauber '''meiner Mutter'''."
.
=== '''Prepositions''' ===
'''may require accusative, dative or genitive objects. They can be found here:'''
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German/Grammar/Prepositions_and_Postpositions.
.
=== '''Verbs''' ===
may require accusative, dative or genitive objects.
.
=== '''Dative verbs''' ===
can be found here:
http://germanforenglishspeakers.com/reference/dative-verbs
.
=== '''Genitive verbs''' ===
can be found here:
https://easy-deutsch.de/en/verbs/verbs-with-complements/genitive/


You can assume other verbs are all accusative, if you don't want to bother search each new verb you meet.


English Wikibooks has an article on: [[wikibooks:German/Grammar/Cases|cases]].
== '''Practice resources''' ==
 
.
 
=== '''Practice resources''' ===
https://quizlet.com/207586948/common-german-genitive-verbs-flash-cards/
https://quizlet.com/207586948/common-german-genitive-verbs-flash-cards/


Line 214: Line 207:


https://quizlet.com/237466632/german-prepositions-cases-flash-cards/
https://quizlet.com/237466632/german-prepositions-cases-flash-cards/
==Other Lessons==
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Questions|Questions]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Common-Mistakes|Common Mistakes]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Inflections-of-adjectives|Inflections of adjectives]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Past-Tense|Past Tense]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Past-Participle-in-German|Past Participle in German]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Present-Tense|Present Tense]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Indefinite-Articles-in-German|Indefinite Articles in German]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Prepositions|Prepositions]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Pronouns-in-German|Pronouns in German]]
* [[Language/German/Grammar/Imperative-Tense|Imperative Tense]]
<span links></span>

Latest revision as of 20:09, 26 March 2023

Learn-german-polyglot-club2.jpg


Hello everybody,

In today's lesson you will learn how to use ¨CASES¨ in German.

There are four cases in German: nominative, accusative, dative, genitive.

  • Nominative (Nom. or N) indicates the subject of a verb, such as "the monkey" in "The monkey eats a banana." "Der Affe isst eine Banane."
  • Accusative (Akk. or A) indicates the direct object, such as "a pen" in "He bought a pen." "Er hat einen Stift gekauft."
  • Dative (Dat. or D) indicates the indirect object, such as "him" in "His father will give him a tricycle." "Sein Vater wird ihm ein Dreirad geben."
  • Genitive (Gen. or G) usually indicates the possessor of something, such as "my mom" in "This is a helicopter of my mom." "Das ist ein Hubschrauber meiner Mutter."


After you've delved into this material, you may find these associated topics worth exploring: Gender, Be Polite, Past Tense Part 1 Perfect Tense & Talking About Obligations.

Prepositions[edit | edit source]

may require accusative, dative or genitive objects. They can be found here:

https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/German/Grammar/Prepositions_and_Postpositions.


Verbs[edit | edit source]

may require accusative, dative or genitive objects.


Dative verbs[edit | edit source]

can be found here:

http://germanforenglishspeakers.com/reference/dative-verbs


Genitive verbs[edit | edit source]

can be found here:

https://easy-deutsch.de/en/verbs/verbs-with-complements/genitive/

You can assume other verbs are all accusative, if you don't want to bother search each new verb you meet.

English Wikibooks has an article on: cases.

In other languages[edit | edit source]

Nos ENGLISH PRONUNCIATION

ENGLISH

GERMAN PRONUNCIATION

BRAZILIAN

PORTUGUESE

BRAZILIAN

PORTUGUESE

01 Nominative : it indicates the

subject of a verb, such as

"the monkey"

Nominativo : Indica o sujeito do verbo, como em

¨o macaco¨

02 Ex.:The monkey

eats a banana

dehr ah feh eest

ah ih neh bah nah neh

Der Affe isst eine Banane dér á fe iist áine

ba na ne

Ex.: O macaco

come a maçã

03
04 Accusative : It indicates

the direct object, such as

"a pen"

Acusativo : Indica o objeto direto, como em

¨a caneta¨

05 Ex.: He bought

a pen

ehr haht ah ih nehn

shtihft geh cow fiht

Er hat einen Stift gekauft. er Hat ái nen chtift

gue káufit

Ele comprou

uma caneta

06
07 Dative : It indicates

the indirect object, such as

"him"

Dativo : Indica o objeto indireto, como em (ele)
08 Ex.: His father will

give him

a tricycle

sah ihn fah tuhr vihrt

ihm ah ihn drah ih rahd geh behn

Sein Vater wird

ihm ein Dreirad

geben

sáin fátâr vírt im áin

drái rat

gue ben

O pai dele lhe

dará

um tricículo

09
10 Genitive : It usually

indicates the possessor of something, such as

"my mom"

Genitivo : Indica o posuidor de alguma coisa, como em

¨minhã mãe¨

11 Ex.: This is

a helicopter

of my mom

dahs ihst ah ihn

hoop chrah ou behr

mah ih nuhr mou tuhr

Das ist ein Hubschrauber meiner Mutter das ist áin

Hup chráuber

mái nâr

mu târ

Este é o

helicóptero

da minha mãe


Practice resources[edit | edit source]

https://quizlet.com/207586948/common-german-genitive-verbs-flash-cards/

https://quizlet.com/164731009/intermediate-german-dative-verbs-flash-cards/

https://quizlet.com/237466632/german-prepositions-cases-flash-cards/

Other Lessons[edit | edit source]