GER-Niveau A2 • Satzstruktur

Negative Frage und doch-Antwort

At CEFR level A2, you learn to form negative yes/no questions in German (Kannst du nicht schlafen?, Hast du keine Zeit?) and to answer them correctly. German has three answer particles: ja, nein and doch. The word doch is used to contradict a negative question.

Kernregel: After a negative question, answer with doch if the positive is true (you contradict the negative assumption) and with nein if the negative is true. After a positive question, answer with ja or nein as usual: Schläfst du nicht? – Doch, ich schlafe! vs. Schläfst du nicht? – Nein, ich schlafe nicht.

Negative Fragen bilden

Negative yes/no questions in German have the same word order as positive ones (verb first, then subject), but you add nicht (to negate the action) or kein- (before a noun that would otherwise take ein- or no article).

Antworten: ja, nein oder doch?

German uses three answer particles. The choice depends on whether the question is positive or negative, and whether your reality matches the question.

Frage Reality positiv Reality negativ
Schläfst du? (positiv) Ja, ich schlafe. Nein, ich schlafe nicht.
Schläfst du nicht? (negativ) Doch, ich schlafe! Nein, ich schlafe nicht.

doch exists because a plain ja would be ambiguous after a negative question. It always contradicts the negative assumption: Hast du keinen Hunger? Doch, ich habe Hunger! · doch never follows a positive question.

Stilistisch: Negative questions often carry extra meaning (surprise, concern, complaint, or a polite suggestion): Möchtest du nicht einen Kaffee? sounds softer than Möchtest du einen Kaffee?

Häufig gestellte Fragen – FAQ

When do I answer doch instead of ja?

Use doch only after a negative question when the positive is actually true. For example: Hast du keinen Hunger? – Doch, ich habe Hunger! After a positive question, the correct affirmative answer is always ja, never doch.

What's the difference between ja, nein and doch?

Ja affirms a positive question (Kommst du? – Ja.). Nein denies a question, positive or negative (Kommst du? – Nein. / Kommst du nicht? – Nein, ich komme nicht.). Doch is only used to contradict a negative question and affirm the positive (Kommst du nicht? – Doch, ich komme!).

How do I form a negative yes/no question in German?

Start with the conjugated verb, then add nicht (to negate the action) or kein- (to negate a noun). For example: Schläfst du nicht? / Hast du keine Zeit? The word order is the same as for positive yes/no questions; only the negation word is added.

Why do Germans sometimes ask negative questions?

Negative questions often express more than just a request for information. They can signal surprise (Ist es nicht toll?), concern (Bist du nicht müde?), disappointment or annoyance (Kannst du nicht pünktlich sein?) or a polite suggestion (Möchtest du nicht einen Kaffee?). The literal meaning is a yes/no question, but the pragmatic meaning is emotional or social.

Übungen

Ready to practice? Log in to begin!
Log in to unlock exercises

More ways to practice German