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Personal Pronouns (Personalpronomen)
Personal pronouns represent people or things in a conversation.
- 1st Person: The speaker (ich, wir).
- 2nd Person: The listener (du, ihr).
- 3rd Person: People or things being talked about (er, sie, es).
- Formal Form: Use Sie (always capitalized) to address one or more people formally.
Quick Reference Table
| Case | 1st (Sing.) | 2nd (Sing.) | 3rd (m/n/f) | 1st (Pl.) | 2nd (Pl.) | 3rd (Pl./Form.) |
| Nominative | ich | du | er/es/sie | wir | ihr | sie/Sie |
| Accusative | mich | dich | ihn/es/sie | uns | euch | sie/Sie |
| Dative | mir | dir | ihm/ihm/ihr | uns | euch | ihnen/Ihnen |
Note: The Genitive forms (meiner, deiner, etc.) are rarely used today except in specific adverbs like meinetwegen.
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The Special Pronoun “Es”
The word es is very versatile. It can:
- Replace a neutral noun (e.g., Das Kind $\rightarrow$ Es).
- Act as a “dummy subject” for weather or time: Es regnet (It is raining), Es ist sieben Uhr (It is seven o’clock).
- Describe feelings: Wie geht es Ihnen? (How are you?).
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Possessive Pronouns (Possessivpronomen)
These show ownership. There is a difference between a Possessive Article (used with a noun) and a Possessive Pronoun (used alone).
- Article: “Das ist mein Hund” (That is my dog).
- Pronoun: “Das ist meiner” (That is mine).
The endings of these words change based on the gender and case of the object owned.
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Demonstrative Pronouns
These are used to highlight or point out something specific.
- der / das / die: Most common in spoken German.
- dieser: Means “this one”.
- jener: Means “that one”.
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Relative Pronouns (Relativpronomen)
Relative pronouns connect a main clause to a relative clause to give more information about a noun.
- Example: Die Kinder, die hier spielen… (The children who are playing here…).
- The gender and number come from the noun, but the case comes from the verb in the relative clause.
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Reflexive Pronouns (Reflexivpronomen)
Used with reflexive verbs where the action refers back to the subject.
- mich / mir (myself)
- dich / dir (yourself)
- sich (himself/herself/itself/themselves)
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Indefinite & Interrogative Pronouns
- Indefinite: Used for non-specific people or things (e.g., man, jemand, etwas, niemand).
- Interrogative (Question Words): Use wer for people and was for things.
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- Wer hat das gesagt? (Who said that?)
- Was ist passiert? (What happened?)
Pro Tip: Pronominal Adverbs
When a preposition is used with a thing (instead of a person), German uses da- + preposition.
- Instead of “Wait for it,” Germans say: Ich warte darauf.
