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grammatikalischer Fall – Questions relating to the grammatical cases (nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive)

1 vote

“Ich geht es gut“ or “Mir geht es gut“

In your examples, only the second option is correct. This particular use of the verb gehen belongs to a group of verbs where the experiencer of a feeling or sensation is not expressed in the nominativ …
GrottenOlm's user avatar
6 votes
Accepted

Grammatical Cases: Wie geht es dir? x Wie heißt du?

In languages with a case system, it is the predicate that dictates which case any given semantic role might take. In German specifically, we have a bunch of words where the experiencer of a feeling or …
GrottenOlm's user avatar
1 vote

Is there any case-gender analyzer?

Your best (and most educational) bet would be to first look up the noun in your favourite online dictionary. This will tell you which gender it is and if there are any abnormalities to look out for. T …
GrottenOlm's user avatar
15 votes
Accepted

Warum ist es "du kannst dir nicht vorstellen" und nicht "du kannst dich nicht vorstellen"?

Those are two very different meanings of the verb vorstellen. sich[reflexive, dat] etwas[acc] vorstellen - to imagine/picture something; This use always requires both a dative reflexive pronoun and a …
GrottenOlm's user avatar