World Languages, asked by YeemoTrash, 1 year ago

What are Nominative and Akkusative Verben?

Answers

Answered by TheBrain189
1
Hi friend,
Here is your answer:

Nominative
   • for the subject of a sentence: who or what is doing this?
Der Student lernt Deutsch.  

   • for predicate nouns: when the main verb is sein or werden, use the nominative for both subject and predicate nouns.
Das ist ein Tisch.
Accusative

   • for the direct object of a sentence: who or what is being <verbed>?

Ich habe einen Tisch.What is being had? A table.

   Note that the very common expression "es gibt" (there is/are) requires that the noun be in the accusative case because it is grammatically a direct object.

Es gibt einen Stuhl da drüben.There is a chair over there.

   • after the accusative prepositions and postpositions: durch, für, gegen, ohne, um (memory aid: dogfu), as well as the postpositions bis and entlang . If a noun follows these prepositions, it will ALWAYS be in the accusative!

Er geht um den Tisch.Around what? The table.Ist das Geschenk für mich?For whom? For me.

   • time expressions in a sentence are usually in accusative: jeden Tag, letzten Sommer, den ganzen Tag, diesen Abend, etc. We haven’t officially learned this yet, but it’s good to know.

Jeden Morgen esse ich Brot zum Frühstück.Every morning.


TheBrain189: brainliest please
Answered by ashPro
0
The answer is absurd
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