Deutsch grammar.

23 topics, each one anchored to passages from real books in the Storica library. Conjugation tables, but with the writers next to them.

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A1 nouns
Der, Die, Das, and the Four Cases
Every German noun has a gender (der, die, or das) and a case role (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive). The article in front of the noun changes for both. This is the single feature that defines the language and the one that takes the longest to internalise.
A1 articles
Artikel (der, die, das, ein, eine)
German uses four article families: definite (der, die, das), indefinite (ein, eine), negative (kein, keine), and possessive (mein, dein, sein). They share a single declension pattern and they appear in front of almost every noun. Choosing the right family is half of writing a German sentence.
A1 mood
Der Imperativ
The mood of commands, requests, and warnings. German has three forms (du, ihr, Sie) plus a wir-form for let's-suggestions, and the conjugation is almost identical to the present tense. The harder part is tone: bare imperatives sound brusque, and softeners like bitte, doch, and mal carry most of the politeness.
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