German adjectives
German adjectives come before the noun, as in English, and are usually not capitalized. However, as in French and other Indo-European languages, they are inflected when they come before a noun. (But, unlike in French, they are not inflected when used as predicative adjectives.) That is, they take an ending that depends on the gender, case, and number of the noun phrase. Adjective inflectionGerman adjectives take different sets of endings in different circumstances. Essentially, the adjectives must provide case, gender and number information if the articles do not. This table lists the various endings, in order masculine, feminine, neuter, plural, for the different inflection cases. For example, "X e X e" denotes "ein, eine, ein, eine"; and "m r m n" denotes "gutem, guter, gutem, guten".
Here are some examples:
Strong inflectionThe strong inflection is used when there is no article at all, or if the noun is preceded by a non-inflectable word or phrase such as ein bisschen, etwas or viel ("a little, some, a lot of/much"). It is also used when the adjective is preceded merely by another regular (i.e. non-article) adjective. More specifically, strong inflection is used:
The adjective endings are similar to the definite article endings, apart from the adjectival ending "-en" in the masculine and neuter genitive singular. (Note: the masculine and neuter genitive singular was originally "-es", as might be expected, but the weak ending "-en" began to displace it by the seventeenth century, and became common by the mid-eighteenth.[2])
Mixed inflectionThe mixed inflection is used when the adjective is preceded by an indefinite article (ein-, kein-) or a possessive determiner. Note: The prevailing view[citation needed] is that the mixed inflection is not a true inflection in its own right, but merely the weak inflection with a few additions to compensate for the lack of the masculine nominative and neuter nominative and accusative endings. Mixed inflection is used after:
Nominative and accusative singular endings are the same as in the strong inflection; all other forms end with "-en".
Weak inflectionThe weak inflection is used when there is a definite word in place (der [die, das, des, den, dem], jed-, jen-, manch-, dies-, solch- and welch-). The definite word has provided most of the necessary information, so the adjective endings are simpler. The endings are applicable to every degree of comparison (positive, comparative, and superlative). Weak inflection is used after:
Five endings in the nominative and accusative cases end with -e, all others with -en.
No inflectionSeveral quantifying words are not (always) inflected:
"wenig" and "viel" can be put in the plural, where they take endings as normal: viele/wenige Kinder Adjective comparisonPositive formThe basic form of the adjective is the positive form: the adjective stem with the appropriate ending.
Comparative formThe basic comparative form consists of the stem and the suffix -er. Inflected, the corresponding adjective ending is attached.
Superlative formA predicate form of the superlative is actually a prepositional phrase. One attaches the suffixes -st and the adjective ending -en to the root, and the word am is put before it.
The attributive superlative form adds the "st" to the comparative root and then the conventional adjective ending.
This form can also be placed in a predicate position with the appropriate adjective ending:
ReferencesExternal linksFor a list of words relating to German adjectives, see the German adjectives category of words in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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