Practice Makes Perfect German Sentence Builder
By Ed Swick
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About this ebook
Practice Makes Perfect helps you put your German vocabulary andgrammar skills together!
You may have all the vocabulary down pat and every grammar point nailed--but without the skill of knowing how to put these elements together, communicating in your second languagewould be nearly impossible. Practice Makes Perfect: German Sentence Builders picks up from where othergrammar books leave off, showing you the variety of structures and how to combine them tomake solid sentences. And like every Practice Makes Perfect title, these books feature crystal-clearexplanations, numerous realistic examples, and dozens of opportunities to practice, practice, practice!
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Practice Makes Perfect German Sentence Builder - Ed Swick
Introduction
Writing skills are usually the most difficult skills to acquire in a language. This is particularly true in a foreign language. The goal of this book is to guide you through the various types of structures in the German language and to illustrate how those structures combine to make sentences.
Naturally, in order to acquire writing skills you have to write. Therefore, you will be provided with an abundance of writing exercises. Some will require a small variation in a given sentence. Others will provide you with a series of words that you form into an appropriate sentence. And you will have plenty of opportunity for coming up with original sentences of your own. This development of your German sentence writing moves gradually and with careful explanation from the least complex activity to the most complex.
In addition to the illustrations of how structures combine to form sentences, and the practice exercises, an answer key is provided at the end of the book. It includes not only the correct answers for the exercises but also sample sentences for you to use to compare to your original sentences.
Good sentence writing is not an impossible task. But it requires analysis and practice and a willingness to apply concepts and rules consistently. Let this book guide you, and you will discover a new confidence as you write more successfully in German.
Viel Glück!
1 Declarative sentences and word order
Declarative sentences in both English and German consist of a subject and a predicate. In German, the subject is in the nominative case, and the verb in the predicate is conjugated appropriately for the subject and in a specific tense:
subject + verb + predicate
Karl + singt + gut.
Karl sings well.
In the example sentence above, the subject is Karl and the verb singt is conjugated in the present tense for the third person singular subject. This basic structure is used in great abundance in the language and can be modified in a variety of ways. Nonetheless, its simple formula is subject plus predicate. If one of those elements is missing, you don’t have a sentence.
Let’s look at a series of sentences composed in this way. Take note of the subjects, the variety of verb types in the predicate, and the various tenses that can be used in declarative sentences. Many sentences are composed of a present perfect tense verb and the auxiliary haben:
Many are composed of a present perfect tense verb and the auxiliary sein:
Many appear in the future tense with the auxiliary werden:
Others can be a combination of a modal auxiliary and an infinitive:
And still others can be written in the passive voice:
In other words, a declarative sentence can take many forms.
Übung 1·1 Rewrite the following declarative sentences in the missing tenses.
Negation
Declarative sentences do not always make positive statements. They can be made negative by adding a negative word to the sentence or by changing a positive subject to a negative subject.
The most common way to negate a sentence is by the addition of the adverb nicht (not):
German usually places nicht in front of the element that is negated. However, if that element is the verb itself, nicht follows the conjugated form or stands between the auxiliary and the corresponding infinitive or participle. Nicht also follows an adverb or adverbial phrase that describes time or place or an object that is in the accusative case:
Nicht precedes a prepositional phrase or an adverbial that describes the manner in which something was done:
subject + verb + nicht + prepositional phrase
Sie + fahren + nicht + nach Hause.
They’re not driving home.
English often requires the auxiliary do/does when negating. This does not occur in German:
When negating a noun, kein (no, not any) is used:
Übung 1·2 Rewrite each sentence, negating the underlined element with nicht.
EXAMPLE: Sie laufen in den Garten.
Sie laufen nicht in den Garten.
1. Das ist das beste Buch.
________________________________________
2. Sie ist am Nachmittag angekommen.
________________________________________
3. Ihr Mann ist bei einem Unglück umgekommen.
________________________________________
4. Er hat helfen wollen.
________________________________________
5. Frau Schneider hat sich wohl gefühlt.
________________________________________
6. Die Studenten sitzen im lesesaal.
________________________________________
7. Seine Frau hat ihn betrogen.
________________________________________
Übung 1·3 Rewrite each sentence, negating the underlined element with kein.
EXAMPLE: Luise hat die Zeitung.
Luise hat keine Zeitung.
1. Meine Großmutter trinkt Kaffee.
________________________________________
2. Boris hat interessante Bücher gefunden.
________________________________________
3. Die Jungen haben den Kindern geholfen.
________________________________________
4. Der Dieb hat ein Wort gesagt.
________________________________________
5. In diesem Wald gibt es Bären.
________________________________________
6. Ich werde das unter diesen Umständen tun.
________________________________________
Übung 1·4 Rewrite each sentence, negating the underlined element with kein or nicht, whichever is appropriate.
1. Ihr Sohn hat mitgehen wollen.
________________________________________
2. Die Leute gehen in seinen Laden.
________________________________________
3. Ich klebte die Marke auf den Brief.
________________________________________
4. Der Bodensee ist der größte See.
________________________________________
5. Ein Mann spricht mit ihm.
________________________________________
6. Die Lehrerin brauchte einen Kugelschreiber.
________________________________________
7. Der betrunkene Mann fährt schnell.
________________________________________
Niemand, nichts, and niemals
The negative pronouns niemand (no one, nobody) and nichts (nothing) are high-frequency words and are commonly used to negate a sentence. The same is true of the adverb nie or niemals (never). Niemand and nichts can act as subjects or objects. Compare their use in the following examples:
Just like jemand, niemand can have a declensional ending in the accusative and dative cases. That ending, however, is optional:
Übung 1·5 Change the underlined word(s) in each sentence to the appropriate negative word: niemand, nichts, or nie (niemals).
EXAMPLE: Thomas hat zehn Euro.
Thomas hat nichts.
1. Die Mädchen wollen Schlittschuh laufen.
________________________________________
2. Der Polizist wird den Dieb verhaften.
________________________________________
3. Manfred geht alle paar Tage in die Stadt.
________________________________________
4. Meine Verwandten waren gestern in Berlin.
________________________________________
5. Sonja wird ihre kranke Tante in Hamburg besuchen.
________________________________________
6. Er will etwas zu essen haben.
________________________________________
Word order
The sentences you have encountered so far all began with the subject of the sentence. But German sentences can begin with other elements as well. When this occurs, the verb in the sentence will precede the subject. Consider the following sentences. Notice that the English sentences cannot always follow the German word order, particularly when the German sentence begins with a direct object:
In the previous examples, the various German sentences began with an adverb (Gestern), a direct object (Das), and a clause (Als ich in Berlin war). And in each case the subject was preceded by the verb:
non-subject element + verb + subject → inverted subject and verb
Übung 1·6 Rewrite each of the following sentences by beginning them with the underlined word or phrase.
EXAMPLE: Die Vorstellung beginnt um zwei Uhr.
Um zwei Uhr beginnt die Vorstellung.
1. Sie ist leider wieder krank geworden.
________________________________________
2. Martin blieb den ganzen Tag zu Hause.
________________________________________
3. Ich verbringe meine Freizeit in der Bibliothek.
________________________________________
4. Ich begegnete meinen Nachbarn, als ich um die Ecke kam.
________________________________________
5. Ich möchte im Herbst nach Italien reisen.
________________________________________
6. Sie geht oft ins Theater, wenn sie in london ist.
________________________________________
It is important to remember that German sentences that begin with some element other than the subject cannot always be translated word for word into English. For example:
Den Mann beißt der Hund.
Those words translate as the man bites the dog, but the German sentence begins with the direct object and must, therefore, be translated into English as the dog bites the man.
Übung 1·7 Rewrite each of the following sentences by placing the direct object at the beginning of the sentence.
EXAMPLE: Der Hund beißt den Mann.
Den Mann beißt der Hund.
1. Er hat den Wecker reparieren lassen.
________________________________________
2. Sie wissen das nicht.
________________________________________
3. Die Jungen spielen Schach.
________________________________________
4. Man muss das nicht.
________________________________________
5. Die Frau kaufte einen Mantel im Kaufhaus.
________________________________________
Übung 1·8 Rewrite the following sentences by beginning each one first with an adverb, then with a prepositional phrase, and finally with a clause of your choosing.
1. Meine Familie isst italienisch.
a. adverb ________________________________________
b. Prepositional phrase ________________________________________
c. clause ________________________________________
2. Sonja spielte Tennis.
a. adverb ________________________________________
b. Prepositional phrase ________________________________________
c. clause ________________________________________
3. Seine Freundin wird einen neuen Wagen kaufen.
a. adverb ________________________________________
b. Prepositional phrase ________________________________________
c. clause ________________________________________
Übung 1·9 Compose sentences using the words provided in each list. Add any necessary words.
EXAMPLE: morgen / kommen / er / mit / Freund / nach Hause
Morgen kommt er mit einem Freund nach Hause.
1. in / Woche / werden / wir / wieder / Wien / sein
________________________________________
2. Mutter / müssen / um / sechs / aufstehen / und / Stadt / fahren
________________________________________
3. als / ich / in / Hauptstadt / sein / gehen / ich / oft / Museum
________________________________________
Übung 1·10 Write original sentences. Begin each one with the cue words provided.
EXAMPLE: (heute)
Heute werde ich meine Tante in Berlin besuchen.
1. (jemand)
________________________________________
2. (vor einer Woche)
________________________________________
3. (um zehn Uhr)
________________________________________
2 Interrogative sentences
In both English and German, there is a variety of ways to form questions. In German questions that concern the action of a verb and in some English questions, the verb precedes the subject:
verb + subject
Ist + Martin zu Hause?
Is Martin at home?
But if the question concerns the action of a verb, English most often uses the auxiliary to do to form the question. For example:
verb + subject
Sprechen + Sie Deutsch?
Do you speak German?
verb + subject
Kaufte + er einen Mantel?
Did he buy a coat?
With the verb to be and sometimes with the verb to have, however, the auxiliary to do is not needed in English. Instead, as in German, the question begins with the verb:
If the verb to have is transitive, a question can be formed either with the auxiliary verb to do or without it. However, the form that uses to do is more common in modern English:
If the verb to have is the auxiliary of a perfect tense, the auxiliary verb to do cannot be used in the formation of a question:
The auxiliary to do is used in English questions only in the present and past tenses with the exception, of course, of to be and to have as illustrated in the previous examples. The English future tense also avoids using to do in a question. Other auxiliaries, such as certain modal auxiliaries, also avoid it:
If the English modal requires the particle word to in order to complete its meaning, use to do to form a question. To be able to is an exception to