A1.1 Grammar | German

Prefix goes to end: aufstehen (to get up) → Ich stehe um 7 Uhr auf. Other A1.1: anrufen, einkaufen, mitbringen, weggehen.

This is the concept that scares most beginners, but it is the backbone of German A1.1 grammar. English uses word order to show who does what to whom. German uses . Cases tell you what role a noun plays in the sentence. german a1.1 grammar

You do not need to learn everything in this article in one day. Instead, break it into two-week chunks: Prefix goes to end: aufstehen (to get up)

About 90% of German verbs are regular. You take the stem and add a standard ending. English uses word order to show who does what to whom

in, an, auf, unter – used with accusative (movement) or dative (position), but at A1.1 just learn as phrases: in die Schule (acc.) vs in der Schule (dat.)

Every German noun has a gender. You must learn the noun with its article.

, you aren't just memorizing lists; you're learning the "skeleton" of a language that is famously logical (and occasionally a bit stubborn).

Select at least 2 products
to compare