Übersetzungsforum Deutsch-Englisch |
Frage: | ||
Antwort: | Ich habe einen Bruder is right. | #878563 |
Haben ist followed by the accusative. Ich habe einen Hund. Sie hat einen Termin. Er hat einen Schnupfen. Hast du einen Vogel? |
Antwort: | #878566 | |
Antwort: | Er ist mein Bruder. | #878570 |
Sein is followed by the nominative. Obviously the subject of a sentence is in the nominative. Or have I misunderstood your question? |
Antwort: | #878572 | |
Antwort: | Nominative is used for the subjects of sentences. [edited] | #878580 |
Der Hund bellt. Die Katze schläft. Das Haus ist blau. Der Hund, die Katze and +das Haus are all nominative in these sentences. Have a look here Google: german nominative and see if you can find a website that suits you. |
Chat: | #878583 | |
Nominative is used for the subjects of sentences (and not "for the objects of sentences"). |
Antwort: | Wer oder was?/Wen oder was? | #878591 |
The subject of a sentence, the one/thing that does something or is something, is in nominative. Der Ball rollt.-->Wer oder was rollt? Der Ball. Der Ball ist grün.-->Wer oder was ist grün? Der Ball. Ich mag Bäume.-->Wer oder was mag Bäume? Ich (Subject, nom.) Wen oder was mag ich? Bäume. (Object, akk.) The question "Wer oder was ..?" always asks for the subject which is always in nominative. The question "Wen oder was ...?" always asks for the akk. object. I guess that's how we learned it in primary school. |
Antwort: | #878604 | |
Wer oder was v. wen oder was only works for native German speakers. Non-native speakers have no instinct for whether the question word would be "wer" or "wen". |
Chat: | #878612 | |
I've tried to explain this to people. It seems as Germans are taught this in primary school we develop a sense for how it's done. In adult life, it seems more difficult. |
Chat: | Regrettably, people who cannot distinguish between nominative and accusative are simply illiterate grammar-wise. | #878626 |
Chat: | #878637 | |
it doesn't help that grammar (as a discipline) is not taught at British schools. |
Antwort: | grammar (as a discipline) is not taught at British schools Is that so? | #878639 |
The national curriculum Key stage 1 Key stage 1 tests cover: English reading English grammar, punctuation and spelling maths Your child will take the tests in May. You can ask the school for the test results. https://www.gov.uk/national-curriculum/key-stage-1-and-2 |
Antwort: | #878646 | |
Antwort: | #878647 | |
Yes. Try these videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRJYfu5ckx8 (when to use the nominative case) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2D3AivwwjNQ (when to use the accusative case) |
Chat: | #878656 | |
4; Proteus-. An example of key stage 1. "Grammar" is taught to key stage 4 AFAIK but nothing about the structure. And all at a very young age... https://www.gov.uk/national-curriculum https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_dat... |
Antwort: | Thanks timfefe for the correction. (It was quite late.) | #878660 |
From 14:06 then when we say "my brother" , it needs akk. form of DER It depends on whether my brother is the subject or the object of the sentence: Mein Bruder heißt Peter - nominative Ich besuche meinen Bruder - accusative |
Antwort: | okay! | #878737 |
Thanks for all answers! ^^ |
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