GermanNow German Two-Way Prepositions: Accusative or Dative? Use accusative for movement into a place (wohin?) and dative for a fixed location (wo?). Master all nine German two-way prepositions with one simple test. GermanNow June 9, 2026 • 6 min read #two-way-prepositions #cases #accusative-vs-dative #grammar #beginner
GermanNow German Adjective Endings Made Simple German adjective endings come down to one question, not three tables: does the article already show gender and case? If yes, the adjective stays lazy. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #adjective-endings #declension #grammar #beginner
GermanNow German Cases Explained Simply (4 Cases) German has four cases, and each answers one question: wer, wen, wem, wessen. Learn nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive without drowning in charts. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #german-cases #grammar #beginner #declension
GermanNow Der, Die, Das: Rules to Guess German Gender German noun gender rules made simple: check the suffix first, then meaning. Endings like -ung, -chen, and -ling predict der, die, or das with ~90% accuracy. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #noun-gender #der-die-das #grammar #beginner
GermanNow German Separable Verbs: When the Prefix Splits German separable verbs split in two: the verb stays near the front and the prefix flies to the end. Learn the stress test and where every piece goes. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #separable-verbs #trennbare-verben #verbs #word-order #grammar
GermanNow Weil vs Denn vs Da: "Because" in German Weil and da send the verb to the end; denn keeps it in second position. Here's how to pick the right German "because" and place the verb correctly. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #weil-vs-denn #conjunctions #word-order #grammar #beginner