Determiners usually precede nouns. The most important ones are the definite article, such as der, die etc.corresponding to ‘the’, and the indefinite article, such as ein, eine etc.corresponding to ‘a’.
Importance of determiners in German
Determiners signal various aspects of the noun
How determiners can changeLook at the following examples with the definite article:
As you can see, the definite article changes in accordance with the gender, number and case of the noun it is linked to. This process is called declension.
Referring to a specific noun
Differences between German and English
• institutions such as schools and street names:
Declension
Nom.
|
der
|
Mann
|
die
|
Frau
|
das
|
Kind
|
die
|
Leute
|
Acc.
|
den
|
Mann
|
die
|
Frau
|
das
|
Kind
|
die
|
Leute
|
Dat.
|
dem
|
Mann
|
der
|
Frau
|
dem
|
Kind
|
den
|
Leuten
|
Gen.
|
des
|
Mannes
|
der
|
Frau
|
des
|
Kindes
|
der
|
Leute
|
Merging of definite articles and prepositions
Er ist in dem Garten. ® Er ist im Garten. ‘He is in the garden’.
The indefinite article
An indefinite article before a noun refers to an unspecified person, thing or idea:
The use of the indefinite article in English and German is very similar, although there are a few differences:
• There is no indefinite article in German when stating an affiliation to a country, city, profession or religion:
• While some nouns function without any article it is important to remember that, put in the negative, the appropriate form of kein has to be used:
Declension
Here are all the various forms of the indefinite article:
Nom.
|
ein
|
Beruf
|
eine
|
Adresse
|
ein
|
Telefon
|
– Bücher
|
Acc.
|
einen
|
Beruf
|
eine
|
Adresse
|
ein
|
Telefon
|
– Bücher
|
Dat.
|
einem
|
Beruf
|
einer
|
Adresse
|
einem
|
Telefon
|
– Büchern
|
Gen.
|
eines
|
Berufs
|
einer
|
Adresse
|
eines
|
Telefons
|
– Bücher
|
The possessives
Indicating ownership
The possessives mein ‘my’, dein ‘your’, Ihr ‘your’, sein ‘his’, ihr ‘her’, sein ‘its’, unser ‘our’, euer ‘your’ (informal), Ihr ‘your’ (formal), ihr ‘their’, refer to ownership or belonging and relate to the noun they precede:
The possessives follow the declension pattern of the indefinite article. As an example, here are all forms of Ihr ‘your’ (formal):
Masculine Feminine Neuter Plural
Nom.
|
Ihr
|
Beruf
|
Ihre
|
Adresse
|
Ihr
|
Telefon
|
Ihre Bücher
|
Acc.
|
Ihren
|
Beruf
|
Ihre
|
Adresse
|
Ihr
|
Telefon
|
Ihre Bücher
|
Dat.
|
Ihrem
|
Beruf
|
Ihrer
|
Adresse
|
Ihrem
|
Telefon
|
Ihren Büchern
|
Gen.
|
Ihres
|
Berufs
|
Ihrer
|
Adresse
|
Ihres
|
Telefons
|
Ihrer Bücher
|
Spelling variations for euer
Note that euer loses its second e in nearly all declension forms, except for the masculine nominative: euer Ball and neuter nominative and accus- ative: euer Baby.
(masculine nominative)
Wir haben euren Ball gefunden.
(masculine accusative)
Demonstratives – dieser, solcher
Pointing out a specific noun
Demonstrative determiners single out specific people, objects, qualities, concepts etc. The most important determiner is dieser ‘this’/‘that’ which refers to a noun in close proximity or previously mentioned:
Declension pattern
Masculine Feminine Neuter Plural
Nom.
|
dieser Mann
|
diese
|
Frau
|
dieses
|
Kind
|
diese Leute
|
Acc.
|
diesen Mann
|
diese
|
Frau
|
dieses
|
Kind
|
diese Leute
|
Dat.
|
diesem Mann
|
dieser
|
Frau
|
diesem
|
Kind
|
diesen Leuten
|
Gen.
|
dieses Mannes
|
dieser
|
Frau
|
dieses
|
Kindes
|
dieser Leute
|
Indefinites – jeder, einige, viel(e), alle
Indefinites usually refer to parts of something or to a whole group, and not to a specific person or object. The most important indefinites are: jeder ‘each’/‘every’, einige ‘some’/‘any’, viel(e) ‘much’/‘many’ and alle ‘all’/ ‘everybody’:
Declension pattern