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1. Actions with "what"
2. Actions without "what"
3. Can these overlap?
4. What are subjects and objects?
5. How subjects and objects differ in English
6. How do subjects and objects look in German?
7. Who loves whom and how genders help
8. Intro to nominative and accusative cases
9. Prepositions and how they tie into all this
10. Summary of everything so far
11. What does the dative case look like?
12. Almost all prepositions and what they trigger
13. How movement and location tie into the cases
14. The difference between movement and location
15. How do you say 'to put' in German?
16. What's allowed in a German sentence?
17. How do adjectives behave in this system?
18. Excellent examples for adjective declension
19. Other articles and how they behave in German
20. A more natural way to get endings right
21. How do reflexive verbs work in German?
22. How verbs with prepositions work fit into this
23. (Briefly) How does the genitive case work?
24. The cases summarized in three simple rules
25. How sentence structure differs from English
26. Questions, commands, statements in German
27. Where everything goes in a German sentence
28. Der, die, and das: Tricks to guess genders better
29. Conclusions
Downloadable Resources:
(PDF) Prepositions and Cases – A handy diagram of German prepositions (with translations) and which case they effect.
(PDF) Prepositions of Movement and Location – An illustration of what kind of movement is expressed with which prepositions and their cases
(PDF) Articles and Adjective Declination – Example sentences to learn in order to get a feeling for the connections, as well as a useful declination table
(PDF) Articles and Adjective Declination – A comprehensive list of articles and which way the following adjectives will end
(PDF) Case Rules – A brief review of what causes which cases
(PDF) Sentence Structure – An illustration of where verbs are located in the different clauses in German
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Your Expath team!