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Meso German with sapientify

The most important grammar of German language:

Kliko secilin titull per te pare shpjegimin e detajuar gramatikor.

Emrat dhe Nyjat

Learn about gender, cases, and article usage in German nouns.

Cases: Nominative, Accusative, Dative, Genitive

Understand how cases affect articles, pronouns, and adjective endings.

Foljet & Kohet e Foljeve

Explore verb conjugations, regular and irregular verbs, and tenses.

E tashmja e Thjeshte

The present tense describes actions happening now or generally.

Example: Ich gehe zur Schule. (I go to school.)

Khet e Shkuaraa (Präteritum & Perfekt)

Two main past tenses: Präteritum for narration, Perfekt for spoken past.

Example: Ich ging nach Hause. (I went home.)

Example: Ich bin gegangen. (I have gone.)

KOha e Ardhme

Used to express future events with “werden” + infinitive.

Example: Ich werde kommen. (I will come.)

Random fact: German uses “werden” for future tense often.

Modal Verbs

Verbs that modify the meaning of the main verb (können, müssen, wollen, etc.).

Example: Ich kann schwimmen. (I can swim.)

Fun fact: Modal verbs change the verb position.

Separable and Inseparable Prefix Verbs

Prefixes that separate or stay attached in sentence structure.

Example Separable: Ich stehe um 7 Uhr auf. (I get up at 7.)

Example Inseparable: Ich verstehe dich. (I understand you.)

Note: Separable prefixes often move to the end.

Word Order

Rules for sentence structure in main and subordinate clauses.

Mbiemrat & Ndajfoljet

Adjective endings, comparative and superlative forms, and adverbs usage.

Peremrat

Personal, possessive, relative, and reflexive pronouns explained.

Prepositions

How prepositions affect cases and their common usage.

scatter

scatter

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