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Businesswoman explaining to young male designer at home desk
German
German Subordinating Conjunctions

German subordinate clauses and, therefore, subordinating conjunctions change the word order in a sentence. Let’s learn the words that are on this list. In German

Cheerful Black Guy Brushing Short Hair With Hairbrush In Bathroom
German
Reflexive Verbs with the Dative Case

A number of verbs use the reflexive pronoun in the dative case. Only two of the dative reflexive pronouns are different from their equivalent accusative reflexive pronoun.

Direction
German
German Directional Adverbs

German signifies directional movement (vs. position) in several ways that English does not. The adverbs hin and her are examples of this specification of movement in a

water glasses
German
German Superlative

The superlative is the highest form of comparison. We put am or the definite article in front of the adjective and add -ste(n) to the end. The formation is the same for all adjectives

She is faster then wind
German
German Comparative

The comparative is the first form of comparison. The ending -er is added to the adjective and the sentences is constructed with als (than). The German Comparative is quite similar to the forms

Berlin, Germany at sunset.
German
German Present Perfect – Separable Prefix Verbs

All of the separable-prefix verbs form their past participle with ge-. Examples: Sie hat gestern angerufen. Separable prefix verbs can be regular, irregular or mixed. Separable prefixes

Time is fleeting
German
German Temporal Prepositions

German temporal prepositions are related to time and answer questions like “When?” and “For how long?” Some require the accusative case, some the dative case,

water glasses
German
German Comparative

The German Comparative is quite similar to the forms in English Grammar. We use comparative adjectives to compare things. There are three comparative forms in

Discover the World. Children lying on world map, looking at it
German
German Dative Prepositions

There are nine prepositions that always take the dative case, but for memorizing them, we will use only the most common eight (see chart below; gegenüber is not listed). A