A1

Accusative Case (Articles) in German

Akkusativ (Artikel)

Overview

The accusative case is the first case beyond the nominative that you encounter at the A1 level, and the good news is that it is far simpler than you might expect. The accusative is used for direct objects — the person or thing directly receiving the action of the verb. In the sentence "I see the man," "the man" is the direct object and goes into the accusative case.

Here is the key insight: only the masculine article changes in the accusative. Feminine, neuter, and plural articles stay exactly the same as in the nominative. So der becomes den, and ein becomes einen — and that is essentially the whole rule.

This makes the accusative the gentlest introduction to the German case system. Once you are comfortable with it, the dative and genitive cases will feel like natural extensions of the same idea.

How It Works

Definite articles:

Gender Nominative Accusative
Masculine der den
Feminine die die
Neuter das das
Plural die die

Indefinite articles:

Gender Nominative Accusative
Masculine ein einen
Feminine eine eine
Neuter ein ein

Negative articles:

Gender Nominative Accusative
Masculine kein keinen
Feminine keine keine
Neuter kein kein
Plural keine keine

When to use the accusative:

  • After most transitive verbs: sehen (to see), kaufen (to buy), haben (to have), brauchen (to need), essen (to eat)
  • After accusative prepositions: für (for), durch (through), gegen (against), ohne (without), um (around)
  • With es gibt (there is/are)

Examples in Context

German English Note
Ich sehe den Mann. I see the man. der → den (masculine)
Sie kauft einen Apfel. She buys an apple. ein → einen (masculine)
Er hat die Zeitung. He has the newspaper. die stays die (feminine)
Wir brauchen das Buch. We need the book. das stays das (neuter)
Ich trinke einen Kaffee. I drink a coffee. ein → einen
Sie hat keinen Hund. She has no dog. kein → keinen
Kennst du den Film? Do you know the movie? der → den
Ich esse eine Pizza. I eat a pizza. eine stays eine (feminine)
Er sucht den Schlüssel. He is looking for the key. der → den
Wir sehen die Kinder. We see the children. die stays die (plural)

Common Mistakes

Forgetting to change the masculine article

  • Wrong: Ich sehe der Mann.
  • Right: Ich sehe den Mann.
  • Why: The direct object of a verb takes the accusative case. For masculine nouns, der must become den.

Changing feminine or neuter articles unnecessarily

  • Wrong: Ich sehe dien Frau.
  • Right: Ich sehe die Frau.
  • Why: Only masculine articles change in the accusative. Feminine, neuter, and plural articles remain the same.

Confusing subject and object

  • Wrong: Den Mann sieht ich. (wrong pronoun form)
  • Right: Den Mann sehe ich. (correct — verb second, subject inverted)
  • Why: Even when the object comes first for emphasis, the article still signals who is doing what. The verb stays in second position.

Practice Tips

  1. The "only masculine changes" mantra: Repeat to yourself: in the accusative, only masculine changes. This one rule covers 90% of what you need.
  2. Label direct objects: When reading German, identify the verb and ask "what?" — the answer is the direct object, which should be in the accusative.
  3. Practice with everyday actions: Describe what you see, buy, eat, and need: "Ich sehe den Baum. Ich kaufe einen Kaffee. Ich brauche das Buch."

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Definite Articles (Nominative) in GermanA1

Concepts that build on this

More A1 concepts

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