شرح Learn German | German Sentence Structure 5 The After Section | Deutsch Für Euch 43 | [معتمد]
دورة learn German Sentence Structure
شارك الآن استفساراتك مع اعضاء دورة learn German Sentence Structure اضغط هنا
سجل الآن
قائمة الدروس | 7 درس
التعليقات
دورات ذات صلة
دورة معتمدة اون لاين مجانية Simple, declarative sentences are identical in German and English: Subject, verb, other.
The verb is always the second element in a German sentence.
With compound verbs, the second part of the verb goes last, but the conjugated part is still second.
German sentences are usually "time, manner, place."
After a subordinate clause / conjunction, the verb goes last.
Throughout this article, note that verb refers to the conjugated or finite verb, i.e., the verb that has an ending that agrees with the subject (er geht, wir geh en, du gehst, etc.). Also, "in second position" or "second place," means the second element, not necessarily the second word. For example, in the following sentence, the subject (Der alte Mann) consists of three words and the verb (kommt) comes second, but it is the fourth word: Deutsch für Euch Syntax | German Sentence Structure | Deutsch Für Euch