Der Satz

Understanding German Sentence Structure: A Simple Guide

Learning German grammar can feel like solving a puzzle. To build a sentence, you need to know the different “pieces” and how they fit together. This guide breaks down the most important components of a German sentence.

  1. The Predicate (Das Prädikat)

The Predicate is the heart of the sentence. It contains the verb.

  • Simple Verb: “Er singt das Lied” (He sings the song).
  • Two Verbs: In some sentences, the main verb moves to the end. “Er will das Lied singen” (He wants to sing the song).
  • The Predicative: With verbs like sein (to be), werden (to become), or bleiben (to stay), the non-verb part is called a “Prädikativ”.
    • Example: “Er ist musikalisch” (He is musical).
  1. The Subject (Das Subjekt)

Every verb needs a Subject. It is always in the Nominative case.

  • The Question: You can find it by asking “Wer?” (Who?) or “Was?” (What?).
  • Example:Der Mann hat Tomaten gekauft” (The man bought tomatoes).
  1. Objects (Objekte)

Objects complete the meaning of the verb. The verb decides which “case” the object must use.

Object Type Question Example
Accusative Wen/Was? (Who/What?) Er sucht einen Kollegen.
Dative Wem? (To whom?) Der Assistent hilft dem Regisseur.
Prepositional Verb + Question Der Mann wartet auf den Bus.
Genitive Wessen? (Whose?) Die Inszenierung bedarf längerer Erklärungen.

Note: Dative objects usually refer to people affected by an action. Genitive objects are rare and often replaced by prepositional objects today.

  1. The Adverbial (Das Adverbial)

Adverbials provide extra information like where, when, why, or how. Unlike objects, they are optional—you can add them to almost any sentence.

  • How: “Sie singt schön” (She sings beautifully).
  • Where: “Sie singt in der Badewanne” (She sings in the bathtub).
  • Why: “Sie singt, weil sie glücklich ist” (She sings because she is happy).
  1. Attributes (Das Attribut)

Attributes describe a noun in more detail.

  • Left Attributes: These come before the noun (like adjectives). Example: “Das kleine Haus”.
  • Right Attributes: These come after the noun (like relative clauses). Example: “Das Haus auf dem Lande“.
  1. Verb Valency (Valenz)

In German, verbs are like magnets; they “pull” a specific number of additions (complements) into the sentence.

  • Subject + Verb: “Sie lacht”.
  • Subject + Verb + Accusative: “Sie liest den Brief”.
  • Subject + Verb + Dative + Accusative: “Sie gibt ihrem Freund den Brief”.

Der Satz - The sentence

Some sentences are complete (-), while others are missing something. Which of the following additions fits which sentence? die Grammatik, den neuen Professor, dem Patienten, die Sehenswürdigkeiten

1 / 6

Paul kennt ......................................................................... .

2 / 6

Der Zug hält an ................................................................ .

3 / 6

Sie zeigen uns ................................................................. .

4 / 6

Die Krankenschwester hilft ............................................ .

5 / 6

Es schneit ......................................................................... .

6 / 6

Wir verstehen ................................................................... .

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