die vier deutschen Fällen

Hi everyone!!!

As I’ve been promissed, today I will start talking about the four German grammatical cases… finally!!! hahaha

The German grammatical cases are:

  1. ,,Nominativ“: It is simply the subject of the sentence.
  2. ,,Akkusativ“: It is the direct object of the sentence. This is the case governed by most verbs and prepositions.
  3. ,,Dativ“: The words are declined when they have indirect object function. A smaller number of verbs and prepositions govern the dative.
  4. ,,Genitiv“: It is essentially the case of possession.

English cases are only apparent with pronouns, not with nouns, as in German. When “he” changes to “him” in English, that’s exactly the same thing that happens when er changes to ihn in German (and der changes to den). This allows German to have more flexibility in word order, for example:

,,Der Hund beißt den Mann.” (“The dog bites the man.”)
,,Den Mann beißt der Hund.” (“The dog bites the man.”)
,,Beißt der Hund den Mann?” (“Is the dog biting the man?”)
,,Beißt den Mann der Hund?” (“Is the dog biting the man?”)

In German the word order can be changed for emphasis, without altering the basic meaning. But if you say “Man bites dog” in English, rather than “Dog bites man”, you change the meaning. Because English does not have the same case markers (der/den), it must depend on word order.

Definite Articles (the)
Fall
Case
Männlich
masculine
Weiblich
feminine
Sächlich
neuter
Mehrzahl
plural
Nom der die das die
Akk den die das die
Dat dem der dem den
Gen des der des der
Indefinite Articles (a/an)
Fall
Case
Männlich
masculine
Weiblich
feminine
Sächlich
neuter
Mehrzahl
plural
Nom (k)ein (k)eine (k)ein keine*
Akk (k)einen (k)eine (k)ein keine*
Dat (k)einem (k)einer (k)einem keine*
Gen (k)eines (k)einer (k)eines keine*

NOTE!

  1. ,,Keine” is the negative of ,,eine“, which has no plural form. But ,,keine” (no/none) can be used in the plural.
Demonstrative Pronouns (der, die, denen)
Fall
Case
Männlich
masculine
Weiblich
feminine
Sächlich
neuter
Mehrzahl
plural
Nom der
that one
die
that one
das
that one
die
these
Akk den
that one
die
that one
das
that one
die
those
Dat dem
(to) that
der
(to) that
dem
(to) that
denen
(to) them
Gen dessen
of that
deren
of that
dessen
of that
deren
of them

NOTE!

  1. When the definite articles are used as demonstrative pronouns, only the dative plural and genitive forms are different from the normal definite articles.
Personal Pronouns
   Nom  Akk  Dat  Gen
 1. Person
sing.
ich
I
 mich
me
 mir
(to) me
mein
my
 2. Person
sing.
 du
you
 dich
you
 dir
(to) you
dein
your
 3. Person
sing.
er
he
ihn
him
ihm
(to) him
sein
his
 3. Person
sing.
 sie
she
sie
her
ihr
(to) her
ihr
her
 3. Person
sing.
 es
it
 es
it
 ihm
(to) it
sein
its
 1. Person
plur.
 wir
we
 uns
us
 uns
(to) us
unser
our
 2. Person
plur.
ihr
you
 euch
you
euch
(to) you
euer
your
 2. Person
formal
 Sie Sie
you
Ihnen
(to) you
 Ihr
your
 3. Person
plur.
sie
they
sie
them
ihnen
(to) them
 ihre
their

NOTES!

  1. The possessive pronoun forms shown here do not indicate the various additional case endings (genitive, dative, etc.) they might have in a typical sentence in various situations (i.e., ,,seiner“, ,,ihres“, etc.).
  2. ,,Sie” is the same in the singular and plural. It is always capitalized in all of its forms.
Interrogative “who”
Fall
Case
Wer?
who?
Nom wer
Akk wen
whom
Dat wem
(to) whom
Gen wessen
whose

NOTES!

  1. ,,Wer” (who) has no plural form in German or English.
  2. The interrogative ,,was” (what) is the same in the nominative and accusative cases. It has no dative or genitive forms and is related to ,,das” and ,,es“. Like ,,wer“, ,,was” has no plural form in German or English.

Examples:

,,Er (der Hund) beißt den Mann.” (“He (the dog) bites the man.”)
,,Ihn (den Mann) hat der Hund gebissen.” (“The dog bit him (the man).”)
,,Wen hat er gebissen?” (“Whom did he bite?”)
,,Wer ist das?” (“Who is that?”)
,,Du hast mich doch gesehen?” (“You did see me (didn’t you)?”)
,,Die hat keine Ahnung.” (“She/That one has no idea.”)

For more about each case, see the next posts!!!! 😉

5 thoughts on “die vier deutschen Fällen

  1. It’s a pity you don’t have a donate button! I’d certainly donate to this outstanding blog! I suppose for now i’ll settle for book-marking and adding your RSS feed to my Google account. I look forward to fresh updates and will share this blog with my Facebook group. Talk soon!

    • Wow!!!! Thank very much for the compliments about my blog and for sharing it!!! This really encouraged me to write more and more!!!
      I’ve been writing some new posts and they will be available at my blog sooner!!!
      See you!! 😀

  2. Pingback: der Akkusativ | Deutsch jeden Tag

  3. Pingback: der Dativ | Deutsch jeden Tag

  4. Pingback: der Genitiv | Deutsch jeden Tag

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