German Strong Verbs, Accusative, Numbers, and Quantity Questions

1. Introduction

This lesson covers forms that are used frequently in simple German sentences.

After this lesson, you should be able to:

2. Strong verbs in the present tense

Some German strong verbs change their stem vowel in the present tense. The change occurs only in the second- and third-person singular forms: du and er / sie / es. The stem vowel normally stays unchanged in the plural.

Vowel change a → ä: fahren

fahren means to travel or go by vehicle.

PersonFormMeaning
ichfahreI travel
dufährstyou travel
er / sie / esfährthe / she / it travels
wirfahrenwe travel
ihrfahrtyou travel
siefahrenthey travel
Siefahrenyou travel, formal

Vowel change a → ä: schlafen

PersonFormMeaning
ichschlafeI sleep
duschläfstyou sleep
er / sie / esschläfthe / she / it sleeps
wirschlafenwe sleep
ihrschlaftyou sleep
sieschlafenthey sleep
Sieschlafenyou sleep, formal

Schläfst du schon? — Are you asleep already?

Vowel change e → i: sprechen

PersonFormMeaning
ichsprecheI speak
dusprichstyou speak
er / sie / essprichthe / she / it speaks
wirsprechenwe speak
ihrsprechtyou speak
siesprechenthey speak
Siesprechenyou speak, formal

Vowel change e → i: nehmen

PersonFormMeaning
ichnehmeI take
dunimmstyou take
er / sie / esnimmthe / she / it takes
wirnehmenwe take
ihrnehmtyou take
sienehmenthey take
Sienehmenyou take, formal

Er nimmt das Buch. — He takes the book.

Vowel change e → ie: lesen

PersonFormMeaning
ichleseI read
duliestyou read
er / sie / esliesthe / she / it reads
wirlesenwe read
ihrlestyou read
sielesenthey read
Sielesenyou read, formal

Vowel change e → ie: sehen

PersonFormMeaning
ichseheI see
dusiehstyou see
er / sie / essiehthe / she / it sees
wirsehenwe see
ihrsehtyou see
siesehenthey see
Siesehenyou see, formal

3. Personal pronouns in the accusative

The accusative often marks a direct object. A direct object answers the German questions wen? — whom? and was? — what?

Ich sehe den Mann. — I see the man. Here, den Mann is the direct object in the accusative.

NominativeAccusativeMeaning
ichmichme
dudichyou
erihnhim
siesieher
esesit
wirunsus
ihreuchyou, plural
siesiethem
SieSieyou, formal

4. Questions about accusative objects

Was? — what?

Use was? for things, ideas, and inanimate nouns.

Er kauft ein Auto. — He is buying a car.
Was kauft er? — What is he buying?
Er kauft ein Auto. — He is buying a car.

Wen? — whom?

Use wen? for people and other living beings.

Sie besucht ihren Onkel. — She visits her uncle.
Wen besucht sie? — Whom is she visiting?
Sie besucht ihren Onkel. — She visits her uncle.

Wohin? — where to?

Wohin? asks about direction or destination. The case that follows depends on the construction or preposition used.

Wohin fährst du? — Where are you going?
Ich fahre nach Berlin. — I am travelling to Berlin.

5. Accusative after für, ohne, and über

Some German prepositions require the accusative. Three important examples in this lesson are für — for, ohne — without, and über — about.

Für + accusative

für can indicate a recipient, purpose, or benefit.

Ohne + accusative

ohne expresses the absence of a person or thing.

Über + accusative

über takes the accusative when it means “about” and introduces a topic.

6. Cardinal numbers

Cardinal numbers state a quantity. They answer the questions wie viel? and wie viele? — how much? or how many?

Numbers from 0 to 12

NumberGermanEnglish
0nullzero
1einsone
2zweitwo
3dreithree
4vierfour
5fünffive
6sechssix
7siebenseven
8achteight
9neunnine
10zehnten
11elfeleven
12zwölftwelve
eins is used on its own. Before a noun, German normally uses ein or a form with an ending: ein Buch, eine Zeitung.

Numbers from 13 to 19

These numbers are usually formed with -zehn.

NumberGermanEnglish
13dreizehnthirteen
14vierzehnfourteen
15fünfzehnfifteen
16sechzehnsixteen
17siebzehnseventeen
18achtzehneighteen
19neunzehnnineteen

Notice the shortened forms sechs → sechzehn and sieben → siebzehn.

Multiples of ten

Most multiples of ten use the ending -zig.

NumberGermanEnglish
20zwanzigtwenty
30dreißigthirty
40vierzigforty
50fünfzigfifty
60sechzigsixty
70siebzigseventy
80achtzigeighty
90neunzigninety

The number 30 has the special form dreißig.

Compound numbers from 21 to 99

German compound numbers use this pattern:

unit + und + multiple of ten
NumberGermanEnglish
21einundzwanzigtwenty-one
22zweiundzwanzigtwenty-two
23dreiundzwanzigtwenty-three
24vierundzwanzigtwenty-four
25fünfundzwanzigtwenty-five
26sechsundzwanzigtwenty-six
27siebenundzwanzigtwenty-seven
28achtundzwanzigtwenty-eight
29neunundzwanzigtwenty-nine

More examples: 34 — vierunddreißig, 48 — achtundvierzig, 57 — siebenundfünfzig, and 99 — neunundneunzig.

Hundreds and thousands

NumberGermanEnglish
100einhundertone hundred
200zweihunderttwo hundred
1000eintausendone thousand
2000zweitausendtwo thousand

Examples: 101 — einhunderteins, 120 — einhundertzwanzig, and 225 — zweihundertfünfundzwanzig.

7. Nouns after cardinal numbers

After cardinal numbers from two upwards, a noun normally appears in the plural. An adjective without an article takes the ending -e in the nominative or accusative plural.

8. Questions with wie viel and wie viele

Wie viel?

Use wie viel? with uncountable nouns.

Wie viele?

Use wie viele? with countable plural nouns.

9. Important details

Learn the vowel change together with each strong verb:

The forms sie and Sie can have different meanings. Context and the verb form show whether the word means she, they, or formal you.

In the meanings covered here, für, ohne, and über take the accusative: für mich, ohne dich, über ihn.

10. What to remember