German Present Tense Flashcards

This is made from the Present Tense page from the Lingolia webpage

1
Q
  1. What do we use the present tense to express?
A

A fact or condition in the present

Example: Das ist Felix / This is Felix

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2
Q
  1. What do we use the present tense to express?
A

An action that takes place in the present once, repeatedly, or never
Example: Jeden Dienstag geht er zum Fußballtraining / Every Tuseday he goes to football practice.

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3
Q
  1. What do we use the present tense to express?
A

An action that expresses how long something has been going on
Example: Er spielt schon seit fünf Jahren Fußball. / He has been playing football for five years.

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4
Q
  1. What do we use the present tense to express?
A

A future action that is already planned or agreed upon
Example:
Nächsten Sonntag hat seine Mannschaft ein wichtiges Spiel. / Next Sunday, his team has an important game.

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5
Q

What kind of verbs are ‘Sein’ and ‘Haben’?

A

They are irregular verbs.

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6
Q

The German language has three verb categories, what are they?

A

weak, strong and mixed

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7
Q

To conjugate verbs in the German present tense, we remove the infinitive ending -en and add the following endings.

Can you name me the first exception to the -en rules?

A

If the word stem ends in d/t, we add an e before the endings -st and -t.
Example:
warten – du wartest, er wartet, ihr wartet

This doesn’t happen when the vowel changes. (In this case the t in the 3rd person singular ending also disappears)
Example:
laden – du lädst, er lädt, ihr ladet (vowel change a to ä)
halten – du hältst, er hält, ihr haltet

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8
Q

Can you name me the second exception to the -en rules?

A

If the word stem ends in s/ß/x/z, we remove the s in the 2nd person singular ending.
Example:
tanzen – du tanzt (not: tanzst)

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9
Q

Can you name me the third exception to the -en rules?

A

If the word stem ends in ie, we remove the e in the ending.
Example:
knien – ich knie, wir knien, sie knien (not: kniee, knieen)

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10
Q

Can you name me the fourth exception to the -en rules?

A

The word stem changes in some strong verbs.
Example:
lesen – ich lese, du liest, er liest, wir lesen, ihr lest, sie lesen

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11
Q

Can you name me the fifth exception to the -en rules?

A

If the infinitive ends in -eln/-ern, we remove the e in the ending.
Example:
wandern – ich wandere, wir wandern, sie wander

In the case of -eln, we can also leave off the e from the word stem in the 1st person singular.
Example:
lächeln – ich läch(e)le, wir lächeln, sie lächeln

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12
Q

Tell me about the present tense.

A

The present tense also called the simple present (Präsens) is used to talk about the present and future in German.

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