Das Nomen

Understanding German Nouns: A Beginner’s Guide

If you are learning German as a foreign language, nouns are your building blocks. In German, every noun has a “gender,” a “number,” and a “case.” This might sound complicated, but there are patterns you can follow!

  1. The Three Genders (Genus)

In German, nouns are either Masculine, Neutral, or Feminine. Usually, you can only tell the gender by the article: der, das, or die.

Top Tip: Always learn the article (der, die, das) together with the word!

How to Spot the Gender

While many genders seem random, some endings give us a hint:

Gender Typical Endings / Groups Examples
Masculine (der) Male people, days, months, seasons, and endings like -er, -ist, -ent.

 

der Vater, der Montag, der Polizist
Neutral (das) Diminutives (small things), languages, and endings like -chen, -um, -ment.

 

das Mädchen, das Museum, das Deutsch
Feminine (die) Female people, numbers, and endings like -ung, -heit, -schaft, -ion.

 

die Zeitung, die Freiheit, die Information

Compound Words: If you combine two words, the last word decides the gender. For example: das Haus + die Tür = die Haustür.

  1. Singular and Plural

In English, we usually just add an “-s” for plural. In German, there are 5 main ways to form a plural:

  1. -n / -en: die Rose → die Rosen
  2. -e: das Tier → die Tiere
  3. -er: das Bild → die Bilder (often with an umlaut like Ä, Ö, Ü)
  4. -s: das Auto → die Autos
  5. No ending (Ø): der Lehrer → die Lehrer

Note: In the plural, the article is always die for all genders!

  1. The Four Cases (Kasus)

The “case” shows the role of the noun in a sentence (subject, direct object, etc.). The four cases are Nominative, Accusative, Dative, and Genitive.

  • Genitive (-s): Masculine and Neutral nouns usually add an -s or -es in the Genitive singular (e.g., des Busses).
  • Dative Plural (-n): In the Dative plural, most nouns add an -n unless they already end in -n or -s (e.g., den Männern).

Special Case: N-Declination

A small group of masculine nouns (like der Herr, der Mensch, der Junge) add an -n or -en in every case except the Nominative.

Summary Table: Case Signals

To help you remember which endings to use, look at these signals on the articles and nouns:

Case Masculine Neutral Feminine Plural
Nom. r (der) s (das) e (die) e (die)
Akk. n (den) s (das) e (die) e (die)
Dat. m (dem) m (dem) r (der) n (den …-n)
Gen. s (des …-s) s (des …-s) r (der) r (der)

Das Nomen - The nouns

What are the plural forms of the following nouns?

1 / 8

die Uhr

2 / 8

der Koffer

3 / 8

das Handtuch

4 / 8

der Vater

5 / 8

die Schülerin

6 / 8

das Auto

7 / 8

die Katze

8 / 8

der Tisch

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