German Verbs

Description

Note on German Verbs, created by TheZombieBat on 07/08/2015.
TheZombieBat
Note by TheZombieBat, updated more than 1 year ago
TheZombieBat
Created by TheZombieBat over 9 years ago
28
1

Resource summary

Page 1

Types of Verbs Transitive: have a direct object He carried the box Intransitive: don't have a direct objectHe smiled Active: subject of verb does the thingShe's eating Passive: subject of verb receives the actionThe apple was eaten Subject Pronoun 1st person ich - Iwir - We 2nd persondu - youSie - you (polite), you guys (polite)ihr - you guys 3rd personer - himsie - shees - itsie - they Polite form is the same as 3rd person plural Sie and sie Sie (polite you) is followed by a 3rd person verb like sie (they) Regular Verbs Verbs have two parts: the stem and the ending Verbs in their infinitive case (dictionary form) usually ends in -n or -en Removing -en or -n gives you the stem Irregular verbs sometimes end in -eln or -ern Present Indicative Tense 1st Person Singularich stem + e 1st Person Pluralwir infinitive 2nd Person Singulardu stem + stSie infinitive 2nd Person Pluralihr stem + t/etSie infinitive 3rd Person Singularer/sie/es stem + t 3rd Person Pluralsie infinitive Verbs ending in -eln omit the e before the l in 1st person singular Verbs ending in -ern may omit the e but don't have to "One ..." is man stem + tman speilt - one plays

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Grammar Rules
Sandra Yeadon
Types of Subordinate Clause & Verb Tense
(umbr)ella
English Grammatical Terminology
Fionnghuala Malone
Random German A-level Vocab
Libby Shaw
Regular Verbs Spanish
Oliver Hall
THE CASES - GERMAN
Holly Miles
A Level: English language and literature techniques = Structure
Jessica 'JessieB
A Level: English language and literature technique = Dramatic terms
Jessica 'JessieB
English Literary Terminology
Fionnghuala Malone
Perfect Tense French Irregular Verbs
Oliver Hall
German GCSE Vocab
naomisargent