At CEFR level A1, Genus (grammatical gender) is one of the first things you must learn about German nouns. Every noun belongs to one of three genders – Maskulin (der), Feminin (die), or Neutrum (das) – and that gender determines the article, adjective endings, and pronouns used with the noun throughout the sentence.
German has three articles for singular nouns. Each one signals the Genus of the noun.
Common in many male persons and some days, months, and seasons.
Often used with female persons and many nouns ending in -e.
Common for diminutives and many nouns ending in -chen or -lein.
| Artikel | Genus | Beschreibung | Beispiele |
|---|---|---|---|
| der | Maskulin | Common in many male persons and some days, months, and seasons. | der Onkel, der Montag, der Winter |
| die | Feminin | Often used with female persons and many nouns ending in -e. | die Ärztin, die Blume, die Reise |
| das | Neutrum | Common for diminutives and many nouns ending in -chen or -lein. | das Mädchen, das Häuschen, das Ticket |
These are helpful clues, not hard rules. Use them as shortcuts, then confirm with a dictionary when needed.
The article changes with case, but the Genus stays the same. Here are a few A1-friendly examples.
German has three grammatical genders: Maskulin (der), Feminin (die), and Neutrum (das). There are useful patterns – nouns ending in –ung are almost always feminine, and diminutives ending in –chen or –lein are always neuter – but many nouns must be memorised with their article.
The Genus of a noun determines the form of its article, adjective endings, and pronouns throughout a sentence. For example, der Tisch → den Tisch in the accusative, while die Lampe stays die Lampe. Getting the gender right is fundamental to correct German grammar.
The gender of a Kompositum (compound noun) is always determined by the last element. So die Tür + der Griff = der Türgriff (masculine). This rule is one of the most reliable in German grammar.