N-Declension (Weak Nouns) in German
N-Deklination
Overview
The N-declension (N-Deklination) is a special pattern that applies to a group of masculine nouns in German. These nouns add -n or -en in every case except the nominative singular. At the B1 level, understanding this pattern is important because many common nouns follow it, including der Junge (boy), der Student (student), der Mensch (person), and der Herr (gentleman/Mr.).
Most German nouns only change their articles when the case changes, but N-declension nouns change the noun itself. For example, "I see the boy" is Ich sehe den Jungen (not den Junge), and "the heart of man" is das Herz des Menschen (not des Mensch). Forgetting this ending is one of the most common errors at the intermediate level.
The good news is that N-declension nouns share identifiable characteristics: they are almost always masculine, often refer to living beings, and frequently end in -e, -ent, -ant, -ist, or -at. Learning to recognize these patterns will help you apply the rule correctly.
How It Works
Declension Pattern
| Case | Standard Masculine (der Tisch) | N-Declension (der Junge) | N-Declension (der Student) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative | der Tisch | der Junge | der Student |
| Accusative | den Tisch | den Jungen | den Studenten |
| Dative | dem Tisch | dem Jungen | dem Studenten |
| Genitive | des Tisches | des Jungen | des Studenten |
Which Nouns Follow N-Declension?
| Category | Examples | Ending Added |
|---|---|---|
| Masculine nouns ending in -e | der Junge, der Kollege, der Kunde, der Löwe | -n |
| Masculine nouns ending in -ent | der Student, der Patient, der Präsident | -en |
| Masculine nouns ending in -ant | der Demonstrant, der Elefant | -en |
| Masculine nouns ending in -ist | der Tourist, der Journalist, der Polizist | -en |
| Masculine nouns ending in -at | der Soldat, der Demokrat, der Kandidat | -en |
| Other common nouns | der Mensch, der Herr, der Bauer, der Nachbar | -en (-n for Herr) |
Special Case: der Herr
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | der Herr | die Herren |
| Accusative | den Herrn | die Herren |
| Dative | dem Herrn | den Herren |
| Genitive | des Herrn | der Herren |
Note: Herr adds only -n in the singular but -en in the plural.
Mixed N-Declension: der Name
A few nouns add -ns in the genitive instead of -n:
| Case | Form |
|---|---|
| Nominative | der Name |
| Accusative | den Namen |
| Dative | dem Namen |
| Genitive | des Namens |
Other examples: der Buchstabe (letter), der Gedanke (thought), der Glaube (belief), das Herz (heart -- the only neuter N-declension noun).
Examples in Context
| German | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Ich sehe den Jungen. | I see the boy. | Accusative: -n added |
| Das Herz des Menschen. | The heart of man. | Genitive: -en added |
| Ich helfe dem Studenten. | I help the student. | Dative: -en added |
| Kennen Sie den Herrn? | Do you know the gentleman? | Accusative: Herr → Herrn |
| Der Kunde wartet. | The customer is waiting. | Nominative: no change |
| Ich frage den Kollegen. | I ask the colleague. | Accusative: -n added |
| Das Büro des Präsidenten. | The president's office. | Genitive: -en added |
| Er gibt dem Patienten die Medizin. | He gives the patient the medicine. | Dative: -en added |
| Der Tourist fotografiert den Löwen. | The tourist photographs the lion. | Both are N-declension nouns |
| Ich kenne den Namen nicht. | I don't know the name. | Mixed: Namen in acc. |
Common Mistakes
Forgetting the -n/-en ending in non-nominative cases
- Wrong: Ich sehe den Junge.
- Right: Ich sehe den Jungen.
- Why: N-declension nouns must add -n or -en in the accusative, dative, and genitive. The nominative is the only case where the base form appears.
Applying N-declension to non-qualifying nouns
- Wrong: Ich sehe den Tischen. (Tisch is not N-declension)
- Right: Ich sehe den Tisch.
- Why: N-declension only applies to specific masculine nouns (mostly living beings with certain endings). Regular masculine nouns do not change in the accusative.
Using the wrong genitive for mixed N-declension nouns
- Wrong: des Namen (missing the -s)
- Right: des Namens
- Why: A small group of N-declension nouns (Name, Buchstabe, Gedanke, Glaube) add -ns in the genitive, not just -n.
Usage Notes
In colloquial spoken German, N-declension endings are sometimes dropped, especially in the accusative. You might hear "Ich frage den Student" instead of "den Studenten" in casual speech. However, this is considered incorrect in standard German and should be avoided in writing or formal contexts. The trend toward dropping N-declension endings is a known development in modern German, but for B1 proficiency and beyond, applying the endings correctly is expected.
Practice Tips
- Make flashcards for the most common N-declension nouns and practice them in accusative and dative sentences. Focus on Junge, Student, Mensch, Herr, Kollege, Kunde, and Nachbar as these appear most frequently.
- When you encounter a new masculine noun ending in -e, -ent, -ant, -ist, or -at, check whether it follows N-declension. Most of them will, and recognizing the pattern saves you from memorizing each noun individually.
- Write short paragraphs using multiple N-declension nouns in different cases to build muscle memory for the endings.
Related Concepts
- Dative Case (Articles) — the parent concept explaining dative forms, which interact with N-declension endings
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