srah
10 years ago
[german] notes & review, pt 1
latest #132
srah
10 years ago
ich frage, du fragst, er/es/sie fragt
srah
10 years ago
wir fragen, ihr fragt, sie/Sie fragen
srah
10 years ago
add 'e' between -t/-d stem ich antworte, du antwortest, er antwortet, wir antworten, ihr antwortet, sie/Sie antworten
立即下載
srah
10 years ago
[tun]: ich tue, du tust, er tut, wir tun, ihr tut, sie/Sie tun
srah
10 years ago
[sein] ich bin, du bist, er ist, wir sind, ihr seid, sie sind
srah
10 years ago
[preference] Was spielst du lieber, Karten oder Scrabble? // Ich spiele lieber Scrabble.
srah
10 years ago
[der- words]: dieser, jeder, welcher, der
srah
10 years ago
[all inflection will be in M/N/F order]
srah
10 years ago
dieser, dieses, diese, diese
jeder, jedes, jede, jede
welcher, welches, welche, welche
srah
10 years ago
der, das, die, die
srah
10 years ago
[ein- words] ein, kein, mein, dein, sein/sein/ihr, unser, euer, ihr, Ihr
srah
10 years ago
all follow [ein, ein, eine, keine] pattern except the euer which loses its second -e- if it takes a terminal e; [euer, euer, eure, eure]
srah
10 years ago
[ADJECTIVE DECLENSIONS IN NOMINATIVE CASE]
srah
10 years ago
[der- word + adjective] very easy, der- words are expressive wrt gender and number, adjectives are mostly in the clear-- [-e, -e, -e, -en]
srah
10 years ago
der rote Pulli, das blaue Hemd, die weiße Jacke, die braunen Schuhe
srah
10 years ago
[ein- word + adjective] masculine & neuter ein- words are identical, so adjective endings must show gender. also still shows number in plural
srah
10 years ago
[-er, -es, -e, -en]
srah
10 years ago
ein roter, ein rotes, eine rote, keine roten
srah
10 years ago
[unpreceded adjectives] take der- word endings exactly, or ein- + adjective endings without the plural marker, however you wanna look at it
srah
10 years ago
[-er, -es, -e, -e]
srah
10 years ago
any -er or -el adjective loses the -e- when it takes an ending, e.g. dunkel > dunkler, teuer > teure
srah
10 years ago
[ACCUSATIVE CASE]
srah
10 years ago
easy peasy lemon squeezie, only change the masculine pronoun & adjective ending
srah
10 years ago
der > den, ein > einen
srah
10 years ago
also interrogative pronoun wer > wen
srah
10 years ago
often used to express specific moments OR durations of time, e.g. diesen Freitag; einen Monat
srah
10 years ago
[ADJECTIVE ENDINGS IN ACCUSATIVE CASE] really easy, same as above except for masculine
srah
10 years ago
der: diesen roten
srah
10 years ago
ein: einen roten
srah
10 years ago
unpreceded: roten
srah
10 years ago
tada
srah
10 years ago
[VERBS: STEM VOWEL CHANGE]
srah
10 years ago
only irregular in the du and er/es/sie forms
srah
10 years ago
e > i, e > ie, a > ä, au > äu
srah
10 years ago
[e > i] examples: essen, geben, nehmen, sprechen, versprechen, werden
srah
10 years ago
ich spreche, du sprichst, er spricht, wir sprechen, ihr sprecht, sie/Sie sprechen
srah
10 years ago
ich nehme, du nimmst, er nimmt, wir nehmen, ihr nehmt, sie/Sie nehmen
srah
10 years ago
etc
srah
10 years ago
[e > ie] examples: lesen, sehen
srah
10 years ago
ich lese, du liest, er liest, wir lesen, ihr lest, sie/Sie lesen
srah
10 years ago
ich sehe, du siehst, er sieht, wir sehen, ihr seht, sie/Sie sehen
srah
10 years ago
[a > ä] examples: backen, fahren, halten, lassen, schlafen, tragen, waschen
srah
10 years ago
ich backe, du bäckst, er bäckt, wir backen, ihr backt, sie backen
srah
10 years ago
[au > äu] laufen
srah
10 years ago
ich laufe, du läufst.... etc thats pretty much it
srah
10 years ago
sein / heißen act as = and do not take direct objects, stays in nominative
srah
10 years ago
es gibt takes a DO
srah
10 years ago
[MODAL VERBS] i love these guys
srah
10 years ago
there are six: können, müssen, wollen, dürfen, sollen, mögen [and möchte, the modal scrappy doo]
srah
10 years ago
all stem change in singular EXCEPT sollen, and all have irregular 1st & 3rd person singulars otherwise
srah
10 years ago
1) no umlauts in non-subjunctive modal singular verb forms
srah
10 years ago
2) 1st & 3rd singular take no endings
srah
10 years ago
können: ich kann, du kannst, er kann, wir können, ihr könnt, sie können
srah
10 years ago
müssen: (i always forget if it has an umlaut! it does) ich muss, du musst, er muss, wir müssen, ihr müsst, sie müssen
srah
10 years ago
wollen: ich will, du willst, er will, wir wollen, ihr wollt, sie wollen
srah
10 years ago
dürfen: ich darf, du darfst, er darf, wir dürfen, ihr dürft, sie dürfen
srah
10 years ago
sollen: (only non stem change!) ich soll, du sollst, er soll, wir sollen, ihr sollt, sie sollen
srah
10 years ago
mögen: ich mag, du magst, er mag, wir mögen, ihr mögt, sie mögen
srah
10 years ago
some things to keep in mind about these beasts! they're modal verbs, which means they're verbs that modify other verbs, with one exception
srah
10 years ago
ich kann = i can
ich muss = i must
ich will = i want
ich darf = i may
ich soll = i should
ich mag = i like
srah
10 years ago
mögen is the weird exception; it's only used to talk about nouns (in the DO), not with infinitives. if you want to express liking for an infinitive (e.g. an activity) use gern
srah
10 years ago
and accordingly, the 6.5th modal, möchte, is the subjunctive form of mögen; where "ich mag = i like," "ich möchte" = i would like
srah
10 years ago
thus it is a polite way of making requests, as in a restaurant
srah
10 years ago
[möchte] ich möchte, du möchtest, er möchte, wir möchten, ihr möchtet, sie möchten
srah
10 years ago
lets see... oh, negating modal verbs is a little sticky in german, its more literal than english
srah
10 years ago
"ich muss nicht" does not mean "i must not," but rather "i am not required to"
srah
10 years ago
"i must not" can be expressed with dürfen: "ich darf nicht," i am not allowed, i may not
srah
10 years ago
sollen is a little sticky too, but in a more idiomatic way that i dont really have a feel for yet; it expresses "an expectation, duty, or obligation," not a suggestion like we use it in english
srah
10 years ago
it's more "supposed to." e.g. "you should be at school right now" vs. "you should be happy about your raise"
srah
10 years ago
"you are supposed to be at school right now"
srah
10 years ago
like basically all verbs ever, modal verbs take the second position in a sentence, which placement pushes their infinitive back to the very end of the clause
srah
10 years ago
incidentally, that will recombine separable prefix verbs into one word
srah
10 years ago
in subordinating conjunctions, the modal goes to the end of the sentence, and the infinitive takes the penultimate slot
srah
10 years ago
soo example 1: Du musst auch fortgehen und reich werden.
srah
10 years ago
example 2: Weißt du zufällig, ob ich irgendwie mogeln kann?
srah
10 years ago
OH YEAH on the topic of modals without infinitives, like mögen
srah
10 years ago
there are times when the infinitive verb can be omitted from the sentence. basically this is when it's very obvious what the omitted verb should be, but its really cool
srah
10 years ago
[obvious verbs of motion]: if the modal is used with a verb of motion, and an ADVERB OF PLACE clearly indicates that motion, the infinitive can be left off (COOL)
srah
10 years ago
this is especially cool in the case of separable prefix verbs, which are basically verbs that contain adverbs; typically on conjugation the adverb will separate from the verb and go elsewhere in the sentence
srah
10 years ago
while the verb hangs out wherever the verb is supposed to go
srah
10 years ago
EXAMPLE: "Ich will zu Frau Holle zurückkommen."
>
"Ich will züruck zu Frau Holle."
srah
10 years ago
so when you're using a modal, the verb (kommen) can be omitted, but the separable prefix (zurück) remains to indicate direction
srah
10 years ago
In English it doesn't really work, but it sounds faintly right in an antiquated way? "I must go to Miss Holle's" becomes "I must to Miss Holle's"
srah
10 years ago
or, as in this specific example, "I must go back to Frau Holle" > "I must back to Frau Holle" (sub'd muss for will)
srah
10 years ago
basically in sep-pref verbs, the prefix ditches the verb and joins the adverbial phrase of place
srah
10 years ago
[ability/skill]: the second type of infinitive omission, used:
1. with the verb können, if the omitted verb is sprechen and the object is the name of a language
srah
10 years ago
2. w/ tun (to do) when the object makes it clear that "tun" is whats missing
srah
10 years ago
Können Sie Deutsch sprechen? > Können Sie Deutsch?
srah
10 years ago
Ja, natürlich kann ich das tun! > Ja, natürlich kann ich das!
srah
10 years ago
the latter being quite common in english, too; "Yeah, of course I can do that!" > "Yeah, of course I can!" roughly
srah
10 years ago
hm hmhmmhm what else can i say about modal verbs
srah
10 years ago
ich möchte gern = i would really like to
ich möchte lieber = i would prefer to
srah
10 years ago
möchte is actually used with verbs as well as nouns, shouldve mentioned that
srah
10 years ago
oh, and i mentioned that sollen =/= suggestion, but you CAN express suggestion by using either müssen or sollen in the subjunctive (müsste, sollte)
srah
10 years ago
[SEPARABLE PREFIX VERBS]
srah
10 years ago
ausgehen > Ich gehe heute aus.
Ich muss heute ausgehen.
srah
10 years ago
pretty simple
srah
10 years ago
mmm negation goes in the second-to-last place
srah
10 years ago
Ich gehe heute nicht aus.
srah
10 years ago
some verb/noun or verb/verb buddies function as sep. pref. verbs even though they're separate words; e.g. Ski laufen, joggen gehen
srah
10 years ago
Er geht heute joggen.
srah
10 years ago
[IMPERATIVES}
srah
10 years ago
there are 3 forms of imperative: SIe, ihr, and du
srah
10 years ago
there are 3 forms of imperative: Sie, ihr, and du
srah
10 years ago
1. Sie = infinitive + Sie.
Kommen Sie! Gehen Sie! Wiederholen Sie!
srah
10 years ago
sein is irregular in the Sie imperative: Seien Sie!
srah
10 years ago
Here's a SP verb in an imperative sentence:
srah
10 years ago
Rufen Sie mich bitte morgen an!
srah
10 years ago
pretty standard
srah
10 years ago
2. ihr = just the ihr form of the conjugated verb with no pronoun
srah
10 years ago
Kommt! Nehmt! Seid!
srah
10 years ago
3. du = just the verb stem
srah
10 years ago
Lass mich in ruhe! Komm!
srah
10 years ago
if the verb has a stem vowel change, the du imperative uses the changed stem; Nimm! Iss!
srah
10 years ago
if the stem ends in -d or -t, add an -e
srah
10 years ago
Rede! Antworte!
srah
10 years ago
[CONJUNCTIONS]
srah
10 years ago
coordinating: aber, beziehungsweise jfc thats a word, denn, entweder... oder..., oder, sondern, und, weder... noch...
srah
10 years ago
subordinating: als, bevor, dass, ob, weil
srah
10 years ago
word order changes in subordinating clauses, obviously
srah
10 years ago
subordinating clauses count as one element of the sentence, so if they begin the sentence the verb will immediately follow them and there will be back to back verbs separated by a comma
srah
10 years ago
hmmhmhmhm [MISC]
srah
10 years ago
gern haben = affection, as in "Ich habe Maria sehr gern."
srah
10 years ago
pronoun man as in "wie sagt man ___"
srah
10 years ago
FLAVORING PARTICLES
srah
10 years ago
doch and/or mal, especially in imperative sentences
srah
10 years ago
bitte can either make an imperative into a request, or intensify a command
srah
10 years ago
so.... whatever for flavoring particles
srah
10 years ago
oh, also denn which only occurs in questions and expresses curiosity, interest, or irritation
srah
10 years ago
denn is also a coordinating conjunction meaning "because"
srah
10 years ago
dann is an adverb that means then, as in "following that"
srah
10 years ago
and that concludes one semester of german, thanks for listening
back to top