Die Wortstellung im Satz

German Word Order Made Easy: A Guide for Beginners

Learning German can feel like solving a puzzle, especially when it comes to word order (Die Wortstellung). Unlike some languages where words can be flexible, German follows specific rules about where the verb and other parts of the sentence go.

Below, we break down the most important rules to help you build perfect German sentences.

  1. The Structure of a German Sentence

A German sentence is divided into different “fields.” Every basic sentence must have at least a Finite Verb (the conjugated verb) and a Middle Field (Mittelfeld).

Most sentences look like this:

  • Vorfeld (Front Field): Usually the subject or a piece of information like time.
  • Finite Verb: The verb that matches the subject. It almost always stays in the second position.
  • Mittelfeld (Middle Field): This is where you put details like pronouns, nouns, and time/place descriptions.
  • Infinite Verb: If there is a second verb (like an infinitive or participle), it goes at the very end.

Example: Der Mann hat gestern ein Auto gekauft. (The man bought a car yesterday.)

  1. What Goes in the “Front Field” (Vorfeld)?

You can put different things at the very beginning of a sentence to emphasize them. Common choices include:

  • The Subject: Er kann schwimmen. (He can swim.)
  • Time or Place: Am Abend essen sie. (In the evening they eat.)
  • Connecting Words: Words like deshalb (therefore) or dann (then).

Important: No matter what you put first, the verb must stay in position two.

  1. The Rules of the “Middle Field” (Mittelfeld)

When you have many words in the middle of a sentence, follow these “tendencies”:

  • Known before New: Put information the listener already knows before new information.
  • Pronouns before Nouns: Er gab ihr die Rose. (He gave her the rose.)
  • Time before Place: Use the order Temporal -> Modal -> Local.
  1. Asking Questions

There are two ways to ask a question in German:

  1. W-Questions:

    These start with a question word like Warum (Why), Wer (Who), or Wie (How). The verb is in the second position.

  2. Yes/No Questions:

    These start directly with the Verb. The “Front Field” is empty.

Question Type Position 1 Position 2
W-Question Warum (Why) kannst (can)
Yes/No Question Kannst (Can) du (you)
  1. Subordinate Clauses (Nebensätze)

When you use words like weil (because) or wenn (if), the rules change. In these “subordinate clauses,” the finite verb moves to the very end.

  • Er geht zum Arzt, weil er Schmerzen hat. (He goes to the doctor because he has pain.)

Quick Summary Table

Sentence Type Verb Position Example
Statement 2nd Position Die Frau geht ins Kino.
Yes/No Question 1st Position Kannst du schwimmen?
Subordinate Clause Last Position …weil es kalt ist.

Wortstellung im Satz - Word order in sentences

Find the error in the sentence structure and rewrite the sentence. Don't forget starting with a capital letter and ending with a full-stop (.) or a question mark (?)

1 / 7

Hat Herr Schmidt gestern seine Tochter in Nürnberg besucht.

2 / 7

Wann kommst du an in Hannover?

3 / 7

Heute kauft im Supermarkt die Frau Gemüse und Fleisch.

4 / 7

Du kommst auch aus Spanien?

5 / 7

Die Kinder sind vor Schulbeginn noch schnell zum Kiosk gestern gelaufen.

6 / 7

Er möchte wissen, ob kommt der Zug pünktlich in Paris an.

7 / 7

Bei Sonnenuntergang machte er einen Heiratsantrag ihr am Meer.

Your score is

The average score is 0%

0%

Scroll to Top