13. German language A1 : Verb Structure in German language

13. German language A1 : Verb Structure in German language

Verbs are the heart of any sentence. Without them, we wouldn’t know what’s happening! In German, verbs work a little differently than in English, but once you understand the patterns, you’ll quickly start building your own sentences.


📌 What Is a Verb? (Was ist ein Verb?)

A verb describes an action, state, or process.

🗣 Example:

  • Ich spiele Fußball. → I play football.
    Here, spiele is the verb. It shows the action.

🔧 Verb Structure (Verbstruktur)

Let’s look at a verb in its base form — the infinitive.

✅ Example:

  • lernen = to learn
    • lern- → verb stem (Verbstamm)
    • -en → verb ending (Endung)

Most German verbs in the infinitive end in -en or -n.

Common infinitive verbs:

  • heißen — to be called
  • sprechen — to speak
  • kommen — to come
  • wohnen — to live
  • hören — to hear / listen
  • machen — to do / make

💡 Tip: Always learn the verb in its infinitive form first!


🔁 Verb Conjugation (Verbkonjugation)

A verb changes its form (is conjugated) depending on the subject in the sentence.

🗣 Examples:

  • Ich komme aus China. → I come from China.
  • Kommt ihr aus Japan? → Do you all come from Japan?

Both use kommen, but the form changes with the subject (ich vs. ihr).


👥 Personal Pronouns Affect the Verb Form

Verb endings depend on two things:

  1. Person (1st, 2nd, 3rd)
  2. Number (singular or plural)

That’s why knowing your personal pronouns is key to conjugating verbs correctly!


🔍 Two Main Types of Verbs in German

1. ✅ Regelmäßige Verben (Regular Verbs)

Regular verbs keep the same stem; only the endings change.

Example:

  • lernendu lernst (you learn)

👉 We covered the regular endings already in Day 12 — check that out if you missed it!


2. ⚠️ Unregelmäßige Verben (Irregular Verbs)

Irregular verbs change their stems in certain forms, especially in du and er/sie/es.

Examples:

  • sprechendu sprichst
  • essendu isst
  • sehendu siehst
  • fahrendu fährst
  • nehmendu nimmst
  • treffendu triffst

These don’t follow a fixed rule, so memorization and practice are essential.

Verb Structure in German language

🎯 Recap

  • A verb shows action and is central to sentence structure.
  • Most infinitives end in -en or -n.
  • Regular verbs = stable stems, predictable endings.
  • Irregular verbs = stem changes in some forms.
  • Conjugation depends on person and number (who is doing the action).

📘 What’s Next?

Tomorrow, we’ll take this further by breaking down the conjugation patterns for regular vs. irregular verbs step by step.

✨ Follow along for daily German learning — just 30 minutes a day can make a huge difference!


Learn german language daily

Leave a Reply