German A1Chapter 10 of 24

Accusative Case

How German marks the thing you have, buy, need, see, or take.

This is your first real case chapter. You have already used nouns after verbs like haben, kaufen and brauchen; now you will learn why some articles change. The accusative case marks the direct object: the person or thing that receives the action. In A1, the big change is masculine: der becomes den, ein becomes einen, and kein becomes keinen.

65 minLevel: A1

What this chapter covers

  • I can identify the direct object in a simple German sentence.
  • I can use den and einen with masculine nouns in the accusative case.
  • I can see that feminine, neuter, and plural articles usually stay the same in the accusative.
  • I can use kein correctly with direct objects.
  • I can talk about buying, needing, looking for, and taking items in a shop.

What you will practise in the app

The full chapter includes 10 interactive exercises covering these formats:

  • Multiple choice questions
  • Vocabulary matching
  • Fill-in-the-blank sentences
  • Word order tasks
  • Listening comprehension
  • Translation practice
  • True or false statements
  • Guided writing task

Vocabulary: Shopping

A small sample from this chapter's vocabulary set.

der der Apfelapple
der der Rucksackbackpack
der der Gutscheinvoucher
der der Pulloversweater
der der Kaffeecoffee

This is only a small sample. The full vocabulary set — with audio, example sentences, and grammar details — is available in the free app.

Why this matters in Germany

This chapter helps you build German you can use in everyday situations in Germany — from understanding simple sentences to handling basic conversations, messages, appointments, study, work, and daily life. Practical language learned in context is easier to remember and use when it matters.

Practise the full chapter for free

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