A1

Separable Verbs (Present) in German

Trennbare Verben im Präsens

Overview

Separable verbs are one of the most distinctive features of German grammar. These are verbs with a prefix that detaches from the main verb and moves to the end of the clause in the present tense. For example, aufstehen (to get up) splits into Ich stehe um 7 Uhr auf — the prefix auf travels all the way to the end of the sentence.

This is an essential A1 topic because many of the most common everyday verbs are separable: aufstehen (to get up), anfangen (to begin), aufmachen (to open), zumachen (to close), ankommen (to arrive), einkaufen (to shop), mitkommen (to come along), anrufen (to call), and many more.

The concept may feel unusual at first, but the pattern is completely regular and predictable. Once you learn to spot the separable prefix, the rest follows naturally.

How It Works

Common separable prefixes:

Prefix Meaning hint Example verb
auf- up, open aufmachen (to open)
an- on, at ankommen (to arrive)
ab- off, away abfahren (to depart)
aus- out ausgehen (to go out)
ein- in einkaufen (to shop)
mit- with, along mitkommen (to come along)
zu- closed, to zumachen (to close)
zurück- back zurückkommen (to come back)
vor- forward, before vorstellen (to introduce)

Sentence structure:

Subject Verb (Position 2) Middle Prefix (End)
Ich stehe um 7 Uhr auf.
Er macht das Fenster auf.
Wir kaufen heute ein.
Wann kommst du an?

Key points:

  • The prefix is always stressed in pronunciation: AUFstehen, ANkommen
  • In the infinitive form (dictionary entry), the prefix is attached: aufstehen
  • In main clauses (present tense), the prefix separates and goes to the end
  • In questions, the verb moves to Position 1, but the prefix still goes to the end
  • With modal verbs, the separable verb stays together as an infinitive at the end: Ich muss aufstehen.

Examples in Context

German English Note
Ich stehe um 7 Uhr auf. I get up at 7 o'clock. auf- separates
Er macht das Fenster auf. He opens the window. auf- at end
Wann kommst du an? When do you arrive? Question form
Wir kaufen am Samstag ein. We shop on Saturday. ein- at end
Sie ruft ihre Mutter an. She calls her mother. an- at end
Der Zug fährt um 9 Uhr ab. The train departs at 9. ab- at end
Ich bringe meinen Freund mit. I bring my friend along. mit- at end
Mach bitte die Tür zu! Please close the door! Imperative
Er kommt morgen zurück. He comes back tomorrow. zurück- at end
Ich muss jetzt aufstehen. I have to get up now. With modal: stays together

Common Mistakes

Leaving the prefix attached in main clauses

  • Wrong: Ich aufstehe um 7 Uhr.
  • Right: Ich stehe um 7 Uhr auf.
  • Why: In present-tense main clauses, the prefix must separate from the verb and move to the end.

Separating the prefix when a modal verb is present

  • Wrong: Ich muss stehe auf.
  • Right: Ich muss aufstehen.
  • Why: When a modal verb is used, the separable verb stays in its infinitive form (unseparated) at the end of the clause.

Forgetting the prefix entirely

  • Wrong: Ich stehe um 7 Uhr. (meaning is incomplete)
  • Right: Ich stehe um 7 Uhr auf.
  • Why: Without the prefix, the meaning changes or becomes incomplete. stehen alone means "to stand," not "to get up."

Practice Tips

  1. Morning routine narration: Describe your morning using separable verbs: "Ich stehe auf. Ich ziehe mich an. Ich mache das Licht an. Ich gehe raus."
  2. Prefix spotting: When you learn a new verb, check if the first syllable is a common separable prefix (auf, an, ab, aus, ein, mit, zu, vor, zurück). If it is stressed, the verb is likely separable.
  3. End-of-sentence focus: Practice placing the prefix at the very end. Read your sentence aloud and make sure the prefix is the last word before the period or question mark.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Regular Verbs (Present) in GermanA1

More A1 concepts

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