The most important grammar of German language:
Click each title to see the detailed grammatical explanation.
Learn about gender, cases, and article usage in German nouns.
Understand how cases affect articles, pronouns, and adjective endings.
Explore verb conjugations, regular and irregular verbs, and tenses.
The present tense describes actions happening now or generally.
Example: I go to school. (I go to school.)
Two main past tenses: Prifferitum for narration, Perfect for spoken past.
Example: I went home. (I went home.)
Example: I left. (I have gone.)
Used to express future events with “werden” + infinitive.
Example: I'll come. (I will come.)
Random fact: German uses “werden” for future tense often.
Verbs that modify the meaning of the main verb (can, must, want, etc.).
Example: I can swim. (I can swim.)
Fun fact: Modal verbs change the verb position.
Prefixes that separate or stay attached in sentence structure.
Example Separable: I am up 7 Clock on. (I get up at 7.)
Example Inseparable: I understand you. (I understand you.)
Note: Separable prefixes often move to the end.
Rules for sentence structure in main and subordinate clauses.
Adjective endings, comparative and superlative forms, and adverbs usage.
Personal, possessive, relative, and reflexive pronouns explained.
How prepositions affect cases and their common usage.