German Practice

German Practice




⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































German Practice

Save your learning progress: 100% free : Register


Why to learn German with us?

free online resources to learn and practice the German language.
online exercises and tables for all major grammar topics.
online trainer for vocabulary , conjugation and to become used to the cases .
all exercises and examples are written by German native speakers.



How to support German.net

Recommend us to your friends on Facebook, Google+ & offline:


German exercises about verb conjugation, concentrating on important and irregular verb forms. Many German verbs follow a certain kind of pattern that speakers can predict and once you learn those patterns then you can figure out how to conjugate them. Haben and sein are not like that, but you must still learn them as stated earlier since they are very important words in the German language. Just remember that all verbs have a basic "to" form similar to the English infinitive form like the words "to play," which for the German language is "spielen."


Conjugating means to use the word in a sentence and to do that you have to put the right ending onto the word. So, if, for example, you want to say "I play" it would be "Ich spiele" and every subject of the sentence is written differently, (i.e. he, you, they, etc). But in German it's slightly different and more complicated than just adding an "s" like in English, you have to use a different ending for every subject, (i.e. ich spiele, sie spielen, du spielst and er spielt).


It helps to keep a list of the confusing verbs and to start looking for written examples to help you to keep them straight.


Save your learning progress: 100% free : Register


Why to learn German with us?

free online resources to learn and practice the German language.
online exercises and tables for all major grammar topics.
online trainer for vocabulary , conjugation and to become used to the cases .
all exercises and examples are written by German native speakers.



How to support German.net

Recommend us to your friends on Facebook, Google+ & offline:


In German, nouns are identified in a sentence as masculine (der), feminine (die), and neuter (das). The article is also identified for plural (die). This can be tricky for the native English speaker, since the articles "the" and "a" are not differentiated in English and adjectives do not decline.


Also, while you would use "the" for singular or plural in English, in the nominative, accusative, or dative cases , articles for German nouns and the adjectives that modify the noun would change depending on the case and the form (masculine, feminine, neuter or plural). For example, if you are looking at nouns in the nominative case , you would have "ein brauner Hund" in the masculine, "eine schwarze Katze" in the feminine, "ein blaues Auto" in the neuter, and "zwei graue Hasen" in the plural.


It is important to know the gender of the noun and the right article in the nominative, as well as being able to use the correct article for the case to avoid confusion in the sentence. For example, "Die Mutter" would be used in the nominative (Die Mutter bringt mir einen roten Apfel), but would be "Der Mutter" in the dative (Ich bringe der Mutter einen Apfel).


Save your learning progress: 100% free : Register


Why to learn German with us?

free online resources to learn and practice the German language.
online exercises and tables for all major grammar topics.
online trainer for vocabulary , conjugation and to become used to the cases .
all exercises and examples are written by German native speakers.



How to support German.net

Recommend us to your friends on Facebook, Google+ & offline:


Like adjectives, pronouns change their form according to gender, case and quantity. The exercises below will help you learn and practice the different forms as well as types of pronouns used.


Save your learning progress: 100% free : Register


Why to learn German with us?

free online resources to learn and practice the German language.
online exercises and tables for all major grammar topics.
online trainer for vocabulary , conjugation and to become used to the cases .
all exercises and examples are written by German native speakers.



How to support German.net

Recommend us to your friends on Facebook, Google+ & offline:


These exercises will help you practice the use of adjectives within a sentence. They include opposites (such as "groß" (big) and "klein" (small)), as well as comparative and superlative adjectives, which change the form or the stem of the words for the comparative and superlative forms. For example, "groß" (big), "größer" (bigger), "am größten" (the biggest) is an irregular adjective, which changes the form of the word. The word, schnell (fast), schneller (faster), am schnellsten (fastest) is a regular adjective, which changes the stem.


You will also want to be aware that adjectives change their endings according to the noun gender or case and whether the noun is singular or plural . For example, "klein" which is modifying a neuter noun would be written as "Die Mutter gibt dem kleinen Kind einen Knochen" in the dative or "Das kleine Auto fährt vorbei." in the nominative. If these sentences were plural, they would be written as "Die Mutter gibt den kleinen Kindern einen Kuchen" or "Die kleinen Autos fahren vorbei."


Since the different endings can be confusing at first, you will want to practice these exercises thoroughly. As you continue to practice, you will learn the adjectives and their endings more quickly.

Just Porno Vod 002 Cover
Sexy Asian Teen Pics
Katy Mixon Hot

Report Page