
Master the four German grammar cases through a step-by-step build-up with explanations, examples, and exercises covering sentence structure, article endings, pronouns, and verbs.
Learn the four German grammar cases—nominative, genitive, dative, and accusative—and how to identify the subject, indirect object, and direct object within the typical subject-verb-object structure.
Explore the nominative case by learning personal pronouns, five verbs (sein, werden, bleiben, heißen, scheinen), and article endings for definite and indefinite forms.
Explore nominative possessive articles in German and how endings vary by gender and number. Practice with mein, dein, sein, ihr, unser, and euer for masculine, feminine, neuter, and plural nouns.
Explore the nominative case with exercises on German pronouns, subjects, and common verbs, and learn how definite and indefinite articles and possessive forms work.
Explore how the accusative case marks the direct object, with examples like Ich habe einen Hund, and learn masculine article endings and six common accusative verbs.
Explore accusative personal pronouns and possessive articles in German, and learn key endings by gender and number, including masculine ending n and feminine or plural adding e.
Practice identifying the accusative object and applying article endings across masculine, feminine, and neuter forms using verbs like haben, kaufen, essen, and trinken.
Learn how the dative case marks the indirect object and changes article endings, with examples from verbs like helfen, and compare nominative, accusative, and dative endings across genders.
Practice the dative case by forming sentences with definite articles, pronouns, and possessives, using verbs like helfen, antworten, danken, glauben, vertrauen, and gratulieren; reinforce dative endings and object positions.
Learn how some German verbs require both dative and accusative objects in one sentence, including six common verbs—geben, zeigen, erklären, bringen, empfehlen, erlauben—and practice nominative, dative, and accusative forms.
Practice translating English sentences into German to distinguish dative and accusative objects, identify the receiver and the thing, and work with verbs like geben, zeigen, erklären, empfehlen.
Explore the genitive attribute in German grammar and how it expresses possession, as in the ball of the woman, contrasting it with the genitive object.
Explore genitive article endings and possessive articles in German, mastering when to use s or es with masculine and neutral nouns, and how feminine and plural forms work.
Master the German genitive attribute by selecting correct possessive articles and creating sentences that show ownership. Practice left and right attribute placement, dative with helfen, and real-world examples.
Explore the genitive object, where a verb governs a genitive noun as in 'to accuse someone of the crime', and contrast it with the genitive attribute.
Learn about the four German cases with a focus on nominative and accusative pronouns; genitive pronouns are rarely used, with modern alternatives like verb plus preposition an, and practical examples.
Practice identifying nominative, genitive, dative, and accusative cases and their article endings, with final exercises all cases part 1.
Master all four German grammar cases through practical exercises on nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive, using articles and pronouns in context with authentic sentence examples.
Hello and welcome to this course!
I’m Lysann and I will guide you through this German grammar course.
Are you struggeling to understand those 4 German grammar cases?
In this course you’ll learn everything about the cases;
why do they exist, when and how to use them.
You'll learn how to use the
Nominative
Accusative
Dative
Dative and Accusative in one sentence
Genitive attribute and Genitive object
You’ll receive all necessary lists to finish the exercises in this course and you’ll find a copy attached in the course resources of course.
The tables you are going to learn and receive inculde
verbs linked to each individual case, personal pronouns, possesive articles and the article endings.
We are going to practice each case individually and at the end of the course we will practise all cases together.
If you like this course please leave a review and in case you have any questions please don't hesitate to send me a message including all your questions. I'm more than happy to help you out.
I really hope that you’ll enjoy this course and that you’ll be able to master the German cases effortlessly after watching this course!
Don’t be afraid of the cases anymore!