top of page

All German nouns have a specific gender.

All German nouns - from tomato to car to desk to cake - have a specific gender.

That's what der, die, das are all about. There are three different ways to say "the" in German depending on the gender of the noun.


What you need to know to learn how to use der, die, das!

There are 3 ways to say "the" in German, depending on the gender of the noun.

So if you want to understand the differences between der die das and learn when and how to use it correctly, you must first learn the gender of the noun!


Knowing the gender of the noun is inevitable and essential, and one of the most important factors of the German language. There are no detours or shortcuts, so please learn the articles from the beginning with the nouns.

There are several ways to learn the articles. Colors: Masculine nouns are marked in blue, feminine nouns are marked in red and neutral nouns are green, plurals are always yellow. Or you can use a table and write new nouns in four different columns divided into masculine, feminine, neutral and plural.


But why is it so important to know "der die das" so precisely anyway?

When you're learning German, you'll notice very quickly that many words, like the articles and adjectives, undergo slight grammatical changes. In English, there is often no equivalent for this. To know how to make these changes correctly, you need to know whether the noun is masculine (der), feminine (die), or neutral (das).


All German nouns have a gender.

We can't apply the concept of gender of nouns to English, but if you studied Spanish or French in school. German also has masculine and feminine nouns, but there is a third gender: the neuter - the genderless gender!

Important: There are no inherent properties of the noun that make it "masculine," "feminine," or "neuter."


Regardless of what the noun is, its gender says nothing about the noun itself (the only exception is that humans and animals usually have the gender that is intuitive, e.g., both woman and cow are feminine, and man and bull are masculine, etc.).

However, it is not the case that certain gendered things are feminine or masculine; it does not mean that tools, trucks, and bugs are masculine while dolls, lipstick, and dresses are feminine. Nor does it mean that things used by both men and women are neuter (e.g., table, chair).


German noun genders cannot be thought through or determined by logics.



In German, the assigned gender of the noun is "marked" by the words preceding it ... for example, by ... der, die, das!


Der indicates that the following noun is masculine [M].

Die, that the noun is feminine [F].

Das, that the noun is a neuter [N].





Note that der, die, das in German indicates gender, while in English it is simply 'the' each time:


der Mann (the man [M])

die Frau (the woman [F])

das Kind (the child [N])


These examples are pretty straightforward. And also most humans and animals have an intuitive gender ... But how do we learn the genders of table, door, pillow, etc.?


Stay tuned for more!




Comments


bottom of page