Sunday, March 8, 2009

The Nominative Case

Der Nominativ • Der Werfall

The nominative case—in German and in English—is the subject of a sentence. The term nominative is from Latin and means to name (think of "nominate").

All German nouns have one of three possible genders: masculine (der), feminine (die) or neuter (das). The nominative plural of any gender is always die (pron. DEE). These gender words are also called definite articles ("the").

The most common gender in German is the masculine. (Keep that in mind the next time you're guessing.). These gender forms—der, die, das—are the nominative forms. They are the article or gender that is found in a German dictionary, but they may change form (be "declined") when in one of the other three German cases.

In English, only persons and personal pronouns have gender, with rare exceptions ("she's a good ship"). In German, every noun (person, place or thing), whether it refers to a tree, a thought, a planet, a car or a man (all masculine nouns in German), has a gender. However, it is the word (das Wort), not the object or concept itself, that has gender..

In the examples below, the nominative word or expression is in red:

Der Hund beißt den Mann.
The dog bites the man.
Dieser Gedanke ist blöd.
This thought is stupid.
Meine Mutter ist Architektin.
My mother is an architect.

The nominative case can also be found in the predicate, as in the last example. The verb "is" acts like an equal sign (my mother = architect). But the nominative is most often the subject of a sentence.

Definite Articles (the)

Fall
Case

Masc.

Fem.

Neu.

Plur.

Nom

der
the

die
the

das
the

die
the

Third Person Pronouns (he, she, it, they)

Nom

er
he

sie
she

es
it

sie
they

Notice that each pronoun ends in the same letter as its corresponding definite article? (der/er, r/e/s/e)

Interrogative Pronouns (questions)

Nom
(people)

wer?
who?

wer?

wer?

wer?

Nom
(things)

was?
what?

was?

was?

was?


Indefinite Articles (a, an)

Fall
Case

Masc.

Fem.

Neu.

Plur.

Nom

ein
a/an

eine
a/an

ein
a/an

keine*
no/none

*Note:
keine is the negative of eine, which has no plural form. But keine (no/none) can be used in the plural: "Keine Autos dürfen hier fahren." (No cars can be used here.)

The Germanic word for the nominative case, der Werfall, reflects the der gender and the question word wer (who): Wer hat mich gestern gesehen? (Who saw me yesterday?)


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