The #German genitive case is the case of possession. The articles are des, der, des, der, eines, einer, eines. #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
German grammar note on two way prepositions, dative examples with location, image of a painting hanging on a wall
#German prepositions an (at, on), auf (on), hinter (behind), in (in), neben (next to), über (over, above), unter (under, beneath), vor (in front of), and zwischen take the dative when they refer to location. #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
German grammar note on two way prepositions, examples with the accusative, image of a book and glasses on a desk
#German prepositions an (at, onto), auf (onto), hinter (behind), in (into), neben (next to), über (over, above), unter (under, beneath), vor (in front of), & zwischen take the accusative when they refer to movement. #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
German grammar note on noun cases, focus on the dative case, image of a family eating together
Most nouns in the #German dative case add an -n in the plural if they don’t already end in –n. Ich gebe den Kindern etwas zu essen. I give the kids something to eat. #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
German grammar note on the dative case, image of a person typing on a computer
The #German dative case is the case of indirect objects and certain prepositions. The articles are dem, der, dem, den, einem, einer, einem. #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
Grammar note on German N-Nouns, image of a boy and a dog
#German N nouns like der Junge (boy), der Student (student), der Mensch (human), or der Nachbar (neighbor), take –(e)n in all forms but the nominative singular. Siehst du den Jungen? Do you see the boy? #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
German grammar note on N-nouns, image of a boy and a dog
#German N nouns like der Junge (boy), der Student (student), der Mensch (human), or der Nachbar (neighbor), take –(e)n in all forms but the nominative singular. Siehst du den Jungen? Do you see the boy? #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
Overview of the German accusative case, image of a glass of wine
The #German accusative case is the case of direct objects and certain prepositions. The articles are den, die, das, die, einen, eine, ein. #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...
German nominative case overview, image of a dog barking
The #German nominative case is the case of subjects and nouns after verbs like sein (to be). The articles are der, die, das, die, ein, eine, ein. #GermanGrammar #GermanCases. Learn more here: thelanguagegarage.com/german-noun-...