german nominative pronouns - EAS

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  1. The German pronouns in the nominative case are:

    • ich “I” (first person singular)
    • du “you” (second person singular familiar)
    • Sie “you” (second person singular formal)
    • er “he, it” (third person singular masculine)
    • sie “she, it” (third person singular feminine)
    • es “it” (third person singular neuter)
    • man “one, you, they, people” (impersonal)
    • wir “we” (first person plural)

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    www.brighthubeducation.com/learning-german/24887-the-nominative-case-in-german-pronouns/
    www.brighthubeducation.com/learning-german/24887-the-nominative-case-in-g…
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  2. People also ask
    What are some examples of nominative pronouns?
    • He is a real help to his mother.
    • Many people’s favorite movie genre is action or drama.
    • I would like to remain anonymous.
    • She will be the fairy.
    • Her new song sounds rather sad.
    • A popular story for children was Alice in Wonderland.
    • Susan used to be the tallest girl in her class until the new students Beth, Sarah, Alicia and Willie came along.

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    treehozz.com/what-are-some-examples-of-nominative-pro…
    How to make German possessive pronouns Yours?

    What about the Possessive Pronoun?

    • I UNSER – ours
    • II EUER – yours
    • III IHR/Ihr – Yours (polite form)
    www.studygermanonline.com/possessive-pronouns-usin…
    What are some German subject pronouns?

    Why German personal pronouns are tricky for English speakers:

    • German has more personal pronoun cases. In English, we have the personal pronouns we use when someone is the subject of the sentence: I, you, he, she, it, we, they. ...
    • German has 4 different types of ‘you’. In English, we have just YOU. ...
    • German has 1 pronoun that has 3 different meanings. ...
    • German has 3 different types of ‘it’. ...
    lingvist.com/course/learn-german-online/resources/germa…
    What are possessive pronouns in German?

    Main Takeaways

    • There are only 6 possessive pronouns in German.
    • Possessive pronouns are used (when the context is clear) to replace nouns / noun phrases that have a possessive determiner at the start of them: My pencil is red → ...
    • Possessive pronouns are usually the very first or very last words in a sentence.
    • Some possessive pronouns have multiple uses — e.g. ...

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    www.studygermanonline.com/possessive-pronouns-usin…
  3. https://study.com/academy/lesson/german-nominative-pronouns.html

    9 rows · The nominative case is used with the subject of the sentence. The subject is the the person or ...

  4. https://deutsch.lingolia.com/en/grammar/pronouns/...

    9 rows · Here are some things to keep in mind when using German pronouns in the nominative case: ...

    • masculine neuter fem. + plural -
      1 st person singular meiner meins meine
      2 nd person singular deiner deins deine
      3 rd person singular (m) seiner seins seine
      See all 9 rows on deutsch.lingolia.com
  5. https://deutsch.lingolia.com/en/grammar/declension/nominative

    The nominative case ( 1. Fall or Wer-Fall in German) is the basic form of articles, adjectives, nouns, and pronouns. The subject of a sentence is always in the nominative case. We can find the nominative case by asking wer/was – …

  6. germansteps.com/german-grammar/nominative-personal-pronouns

    In German there are three words for ‘you‘: the familiar forms du and ihr, and the polite form Sie. When talking to family, friends and small children, we use du to address one person and ihr to …

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