
Meet your instructor, a German language expert with 12 years of corporate training experience guiding you from A1 to C2 across communication, written German, and business contexts.
Explore the basics of German sentence structure and word order, compare it with English, and review verb positions, cases, tenses, and conjunction effects.
Explore basic sentence structure in English and German, identifying subject, verb, and direct and indirect objects, with nouns or pronouns filling each role.
Explore the four German cases and see how subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, and possessive objects map to nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive.
Explore the overview of German word order, learning how subject, verb, and object positions shape sentences in SVO language, with modal and separable verbs, tenses, negation, conjunctions, and relative clauses.
Explains the verb position in German word order, showing that the verb is always in second place, with examples including yes-no questions and upcoming videos.
Learn how the verb comes in the second position in German w-fragen, with examples like where, wohin, woher, and who, and practice the verb-second structure.
Master the German word order by noting that verbs normally occupy second position, while yes/no questions place the verb first, with practical examples guiding practice.
Explore the Dicamillo concept and German word order, arranging subject plus verb and then temporal, causal, modal, and local complements with examples like travelling on Monday by train to Frankfurt.
Explore temporal complement in German word order and how time expressions like manchmal and um sieben appear after the verb. Stress can move them to the sentence start.
Explore the German causal complement in word order, showing how causal elements like wegen einer hochzeit or aus liebe influence verb position when temporal complements are present or absent.
Explore modal complements in German word order, showing how the modal takes precedence and the verb remains in second position, with examples like mit seinen freunden.
Learn how the local complement shapes German word order and its interaction with temporal, causal, modal, dative, accusative, and prepositional complements through practical examples.
Explore the German word order for modal verbs, covering future tense and conversational past tense, where the modal verb agrees with the subject and the main verb ends in infinitive.
Explore the German word order in future tense and the three meanings of werden, including its use for future, passive voice, and main verb.
Explore the German conversational past tense by using haben as the auxiliary and placing the past participle at the end, with learned and played as examples.
Learn the present-tense word order of separable German verbs and how prefixes move to the end of the sentence, with examples like ich komme um 8.
Explore separable verbs in past tense, including present perfect and participle placement. See how haben agrees with the subject and the verb goes to the end with rufen and anrufen.
Learn the future tense word order for separable verbs, with the verb at the end in infinitive form and subject conjugation illustrated by examples like ankommen and aufstehen.
Learn how accusative and dative objects position themselves in German word order, with subject and verb before object types and variations for pronouns versus nouns.
Explore the position of accusative objects in German word order, noting direct objects (nouns) often end the sentence while accusative pronouns come first.
Explore the position of the dative object in German word order and how dative nouns or pronouns sit before the accusative noun.
Learn how German word order handles objects, rules for pronoun versus noun combinations: accusative comes first with pronoun objects, dative with noun objects, and pronouns precede nouns in mixed cases.
Learn German word order with relative pronouns in nominative, accusative, dative, and infinitive, including pronoun forms and examples illustrating subject and object usage.
Learn the German word order with relative pronouns in accusative, with the relative pronoun first and the conjugated verb at the end across masculine, feminine, and neutral examples.
Explore word order with relative pronouns in dative, including masculine, feminine, neutral, and plural forms, and move the conjugated verb haben to the end of the clause.
Explore the word order of relative pronouns in genitive across masculine, feminine, neutral, and plural forms, with the conjugated verb moved to the end of the clause.
Complete this course to master German word order and build a strong base, while sharing reviews to guide future learners and stay connected for ongoing support.
Greetings Student!
My name is Kiran and I will be your guide through the secrets of the German language. Welcome to the course “LEARN GERMAN EASILY: MASTERING THE GERMAN WORD ORDER”
This course is for you if:
- You have knowledge on Basic concepts of German
- You prefer concise and focused lessons on GERMAN WORD ORDER
- You want to learn and explore TeKaMoLo concept in GERMAN WORD ORDER
- You want to know the position of Objects in German Word Order
- You want to apply logic while SPEAKING and WRITING in German by understanding total Word Order Concepts.
- You seek personalized feedback and guidance through assignments
- You aim is to succeed in speaking and writing German language effectively and get success in German exams (such as the Goethe exam)
How does it work?
This course mirrors the structure of my individual German lessons, resembling the personal sessions I conduct with my students in person. Comprising 9 sections, each centred on a specific theme, every section features between 3 to 5 individual lessons, with most lessons lasting between 5 to 10 minutes. The content is thoughtfully divided into easily digestible, bite-sized pieces.
You receive a practical vocabulary, sample sentences, and grammar explanations presented in a clear and approachable manner, avoiding unnecessary complexity.
Following each section, you'll engage in an exercise, allowing you to immediately apply and practice your newfound knowledge.
Additionally, there are assignments in which you'll receive feedback and guidance from me, ensuring you understand what aspects to review or be mindful of.
Should you have any further inquiries, don't hesitate to reach out to me before making your purchase!
Looking forward to seeing you in the course! :)