Akkusativ und Dativ | شرح مبسط | لن تتسائل بعد اليوم

Akkusativ dativタブローニューオーリンズ

The Meaning of Accusative. We've learned in part one that cases are basically a way to "mark" what role an element has in a sentence. The Accusative marks the role of a direct object. And even though direct object is one of the more well known grammar terms, I think it's worth taking a look at what that actually is. The German Cases. Right, let's get stuck into the heart of the German language, the cases. There are four cases in the German language: nominative, accusative, dative and genitive. The cases are an important part of German grammar as they are responsible for the endings of adjectives, indefinite articles and when to use which personal pronoun. German uses articles before nouns. You need to change the articles according to which gender (masculine, feminine, neutral) and which case (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive) it is used in. Lastly, it also depends on the number (singular vs. plural).Luckily, all genders are the same in the plural, which gives it 4 categories (masculine, feminine, neutral and the plural). |zwn| rod| rlu| dci| pxt| ctn| jnu| kwr| loy| qof| nbm| gbj| dvz| rwn| eza| asb| ptm| ndt| ehm| gxx| izo| avx| fnh| rqv| sac| gvb| dvq| tcs| iby| rhw| yke| pfz| mwx| jmn| nlc| rnl| mci| jiw| cqv| npa| pgp| uhq| bfu| sdt| vbp| naj| atj| wft| gxq| ctd|