📄️ Adjektivdeklination
📌 In German, adjectives (Adjektiv) that come before a noun must change their ending to match the gender (der, die, das), number (singular, plural), and case (Kasus) of that noun.
📄️ Komparativ und Superlativ
📌 In German, adjectives can be used in three degrees of comparison:
📄️ Perfekt
📌 The Perfekt tense is commonly used in spoken language and informal writing to describe actions that happened in the past. To form Perfekt, we need two main components: auxiliary verb (haben/sein) and the Partizip II of the main verb.
📄️ Präteritum
📌 The Präteritum tense (also called Imperfekt) is used to describe events or actions that happened in the past.
📄️ Plusquamperfekt
📌 The Plusquamperfekt tense (also called past perfect) is used to describe an action that happened and was completed before another action in the past.
📄️ Die Nebensätze
- A subordinate clause (Nebensätze) is a type of clause that cannot stand alone and must add meaning to the main clause.
📄️ Passiv
- The passive voice (Passiv) is used when the action is more important than the agent performing the action.
📄️ Das Futur I & Futur II
- The Future Tense I (Futur I) is used to describe events in the future or to express assumptions about the present.
📄️ Ersatzformen des Passivs
- In German, there are many ways to express passive meaning without directly using the passive form (Passiv).
📄️ Die Possessivpronomen
- Possessive pronouns (Possessivpronomen) indicate ownership or relationship between people or things.
📄️ Reflexivpronomen und reflexive Verben
- Reflexive pronouns (Reflexivpronomen) are used when the subject and object of a sentence are the same person or thing.
📄️ Genitiv
- Genitive (Genitiv) is one of the four cases (Kasus) in German, mainly used to express possession.