Bestimmte und unbestimmte Artikel (Articles)
A1 German grammar — Colors. Every German noun has a gender: masculine (der), feminine (die), neuter (das). Indefinite articles are ein / eine / ein.…
Rule explained
Every German noun has a gender: masculine (der), feminine (die), neuter (das). Indefinite articles are ein / eine / ein. The definite and indefinite articles also change with the four **cases** (Kasus): nominative (subject), accusative (direct object of many verbs), dative (indirect object / certain prepositions), genitive (possession — less frequent in spoken A1, but articles still matter in set phrases). In A1 you mainly need **nominative** (*Der Ball ist rot*) and **accusative** after many verbs and prepositions like *durch*, *für*, *ohne* (*Ich sehe den roten Ball*). Learning **noun + article** as one chunk saves gender mistakes later.
Examples
Use these mini-pairs as templates:
- Der Mann ist alt. — The man is old.
- Die Frau ist nett. — The woman is nice.
- Das Kind spielt. — The child plays.
- Ich habe einen Hund. — I have a dog.
- Sie kauft eine Tasche. — She buys a bag.
Common mistakes
Watch out for these learner errors:
- Always learn the article WITH the noun — gender is rarely guessable.
- Plural always uses 'die' regardless of original gender.
- After *ich sehe / ich habe / ich kaufe* the masculine definite article is often **den** (accusative), not *der*.
- Neuter *das* and *ein* look identical in nominative/accusative — case shows up in other contexts (*mit dem Auto*).