CEFR level A2 • Nomen und Artikel

Der Kasus: Die vier Fälle

German grammatical cases (Kasus) are the system of four inflectional forms—Nominativ, Akkusativ, Dativ, and Genitiv—that indicate the grammatical function of a noun or noun phrase within a sentence. Each case answers a specific question (Wer? Wen? Wem? Wessen?) and determines how articles, adjectives, and pronouns change their endings.

Kernregel: The case system (Kasus) is the fundamental German grammatical mechanism that transforms articles and noun forms based on syntactic role—unlike English which relies primarily on word order.

German grammatical cases (Kasus) are the system of four inflectional forms—Nominativ, Akkusativ, Dativ, and Genitiv—that indicate the grammatical function of a noun or noun phrase within a sentence. Each case answers a specific question (Wer? Wen? Wem? Wessen?) and determines how articles, adjectives, and pronouns change their endings.

Kernregel: The case system (Kasus) is the fundamental German grammatical mechanism that transforms articles and noun forms based on syntactic role—unlike English which relies primarily on word order.

Rule: Articles change their form based on case, gender, and number—the same noun phrase transforms as its grammatical function changes.

Example (Transformation): Der Arzt (Nominativ: subject) → Ich besuche den Arzt (Akkusativ: direct object) → Ich vertraue dem Arzt (Dativ: indirect object) → Das Büro des Arztes (Genitiv: possession).

Contrast: English "the doctor" remains unchanged regardless of function; German der/den/dem/des Arzt signals grammatical role through article transformation and, in Genitiv, noun suffix.

Die vier Fälle im Überblick

Each case serves a distinct grammatical function and is identified by asking a specific question.

1. Nominativ

Question: Wer oder was? (Who or what?)

Function: Identifies the subject of the sentence – the person or thing performing the action.

  • Der Lehrer erklärt die Grammatik.
  • Die Katze schläft auf dem Sofa.

2. Akkusativ

Question: Wen oder was? (Whom or what?)

Function: Marks the direct object – the person or thing directly affected by the action.

  • Ich kaufe den Computer.
  • Sie besucht die Freundin.

3. Dativ

Question: Wem? (To whom?)

Function: Marks the indirect object – the person who receives or benefits from the action.

  • Er hilft dem Nachbarn.
  • Ich schreibe der Lehrerin eine E-Mail.

4. Genitiv

Question: Wessen? (Whose?)

Function: Shows possession or belonging.

  • Das Auto des Vaters ist neu.
  • Die Tasche der Studentin ist schwer.

Die Artikel nach Kasus

Articles change their form depending on the case. This table shows the definite article declension across all four cases.

Kasus Maskulin Feminin Neutral Plural
Nominativ der Mann die Frau das Kind die Leute
Akkusativ den Mann die Frau das Kind die Leute
Dativ dem Mann der Frau dem Kind den Leuten
Genitiv des Mannes der Frau des Kindes der Leute

Wichtige Regeln

Endungen bei Nomen

Genitiv Singular (Maskulin & Neutral): Add -(e)s

  • des Hauses, des Mannes, des Tisches
  • One-syllable nouns often take -es: des Jahres, des Tags

Dativ Plural: Add -n to most nouns (if they don't already end in -n)

  • die Kinder → den Kindern
  • die Häuser → den Häusern

Was bestimmt den Kasus?

A. Verben: Some verbs require specific cases

  • Akkusativ: sehen, haben, kaufen, lesen, treffen
  • Dativ: helfen, danken, gefallen, gehören, antworten
  • Beide: geben, zeigen, schenken (Dativ + Akkusativ)

Example: Ich zeige dem Chef (Dativ) den Bericht (Akkusativ).

Präpositionen bestimmen den Kasus

Prepositions always govern a specific case:

  • + Akkusativ: durch, für, gegen, ohne, um
  • + Dativ: aus, bei, mit, nach, seit, von, zu
  • + Genitiv: während, wegen, trotz, statt
  • Wechselpräpositionen: in, an, auf, über, unter, vor, hinter, neben, zwischen
    (Use Akkusativ for movement, Dativ for location)

Beispiele: Die vier Fälle im Satz

Look how the same noun changes form depending on its role in the sentence:

Der Arzt (maskulin)

  • Nominativ: Der Arzt arbeitet im Krankenhaus.
  • Akkusativ: Ich besuche den Arzt morgen.
  • Dativ: Wir vertrauen dem Arzt.
  • Genitiv: Das Büro des Arztes ist groß.

Die Stadt (feminin)

  • Nominativ: Die Stadt ist sehr alt.
  • Akkusativ: Wir erkunden die Stadt zu Fuß.
  • Dativ: In der Stadt gibt es viele Parks.
  • Genitiv: Die Geschichte der Stadt ist faszinierend.

Häufig gestellte Fragen – FAQ

How do I know which German case to use?

Ask the specific question for each case: Wer oder was? (Nominativ for subject), Wen oder was? (Akkusativ for direct object), Wem? (Dativ for indirect object), Wessen? (Genitiv for possession). Verbs and prepositions also govern specific cases.

What is the difference between Akkusativ and Dativ?

Akkusativ marks the direct object (who/what receives the action directly): Ich sehe den Mann. Dativ marks the indirect object (to/for whom): Ich helfe dem Mann. Many verbs govern one specific case.

Why do German articles change with cases?

German articles inflect to show grammatical relationships—the ending signals whether a noun is the subject, object, or possessor. English lost most case inflections and relies on word order instead.

Do all German nouns change in different cases?

Most nouns remain unchanged except: masculine and neutral nouns add -(e)s in Genitiv singular (des Mannes), and most plural nouns add -n in Dativ plural (den Kindern).

Häufig gestellte Fragen – FAQ

How do I know which German case to use?

Ask the specific question for each case: Wer oder was? (Nominativ for subject), Wen oder was? (Akkusativ for direct object), Wem? (Dativ for indirect object), Wessen? (Genitiv for possession). Verbs and prepositions also govern specific cases.

What is the difference between Akkusativ and Dativ?

Akkusativ marks the direct object (who/what receives the action directly): Ich sehe den Mann. Dativ marks the indirect object (to/for whom): Ich helfe dem Mann. Many verbs govern one specific case.

Why do German articles change with cases?

German articles inflect to show grammatical relationships—the ending signals whether a noun is the subject, object, or possessor. English lost most case inflections and relies on word order instead.

Do all German nouns change in different cases?

Most nouns remain unchanged except: masculine and neutral nouns add -(e)s in Genitiv singular (des Mannes), and most plural nouns add -n in Dativ plural (den Kindern).

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