GermanNow German Body Parts: Vocabulary + How to Say It Hurts Learn German body parts with der/die/das and plurals, plus the two ways to say something hurts: Mir tut der Kopf weh and Ich habe Kopfschmerzen. GermanNow June 9, 2026 • 5 min read #body-parts #vocabulary #health #beginner
GermanNow German Compound Words: How to Read Any Long Word Read any long German word by working right-to-left: the last noun sets the meaning and gender, and the small linking letters are just glue. Here's the drill. GermanNow June 9, 2026 • 6 min read #compound-words #vocabulary #reading #beginner
GermanNow German Two-Way Prepositions: Accusative or Dative? Use accusative for movement into a place (wohin?) and dative for a fixed location (wo?). Master all nine German two-way prepositions with one simple test. GermanNow June 9, 2026 • 6 min read #two-way-prepositions #cases #accusative-vs-dative #grammar #beginner
GermanNow How Long Does It Take to Learn German? Real Timeline How long to learn German? Conversational B1 takes ~6–12 months, fluent B2 about 1.5–2.5 years part-time. Here's an honest, hours-based timeline by CEFR level. GermanNow June 9, 2026 • 5 min read #learning-timeline #cefr-levels #fsi-hours #beginner
GermanNow Bitte in German: Please, You're Welcome, and More Bitte means please, you're welcome, here you go, and pardon in German. Learn all the meanings, bitte schön vs bitte sehr, and the danke-bitte rule. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #bitte #politeness #vocabulary #beginner
GermanNow Du vs. Sie: When to Use Each in German Use Sie with strangers, elders, and at work; use du with friends, family, kids, and peers. Here's how to pick the right German you every time. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #du-vs-sie #formal-german #culture #pronouns #beginner
GermanNow German Adjective Endings Made Simple German adjective endings come down to one question, not three tables: does the article already show gender and case? If yes, the adjective stays lazy. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #adjective-endings #declension #grammar #beginner
GermanNow German Cases Explained Simply (4 Cases) German has four cases, and each answers one question: wer, wen, wem, wessen. Learn nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive without drowning in charts. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #german-cases #grammar #beginner #declension
GermanNow German False Friends: 25 Words That Trick You German false friends like Gift (poison) and bekommen (to receive) trick English speakers daily. Here are 25 words that mean the opposite of what you'd guess. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #false-friends #vocabulary #common-mistakes #beginner
GermanNow German Days, Months & Seasons (am, im & -tag) Days of the week in German use am, months and seasons use im — plus the -tag pattern, capitalized nouns, and how to build a real sentence with a day. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 4 min read #days-of-the-week #months #seasons #prepositions #beginner
GermanNow German Colors: Names, Shades, and Idioms German colors are adjectives that take endings — say das rote Auto, not das rot Auto. Get the names, shades, the das-Rot rule, and 14 color idioms. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #colors #adjectives #vocabulary #idioms #beginner
GermanNow German Modal Verbs: Können, Müssen, Wollen and More German modal verbs put the modal in position 2 and the real verb at the end. Master können, müssen, wollen and the rest with charts and clear examples. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #modal-verbs #verbs #word-order #beginner
GermanNow Der, Die, Das: Rules to Guess German Gender German noun gender rules made simple: check the suffix first, then meaning. Endings like -ung, -chen, and -ling predict der, die, or das with ~90% accuracy. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #noun-gender #der-die-das #grammar #beginner
GermanNow German Numbers 1–100: Why 21 Is Said Backwards German numbers 1 to 100 reverse the digits: 21 is einundzwanzig (one-and-twenty). Learn the und rule, the irregulars, and how to hear prices fast. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #numbers #counting #pronunciation #beginner #vocabulary
GermanNow Order Food in German: Restaurant Phrases Order food in German with confidence: use ich hätte gern, read the Speisekarte, ask die Rechnung bitte, and handle zusammen oder getrennt like a local. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #restaurant #phrases #travel #food-and-drink #beginner
GermanNow German Umlauts & ß: Sounds and Typing Pronounce ä, ö, ü with the front-tongue, rounded-lips rule, master the ß vs ss spelling, and type every German umlaut on Mac, Windows, and phone. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #umlauts #pronunciation #eszett #typing #beginner
GermanNow German Word Order: The Verb Rules That Trip You Up German word order comes down to three verb-position rules: the verb is second in main clauses, last after weil and dass, and time comes before place. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #word-order #verbs #v2-rule #tekamolo #beginner
GermanNow German Greetings by Region: Grüß Gott to Grüezi German greetings change by region: say Moin in Hamburg, Grüß Gott in Bavaria, Grüezi in Switzerland. A map of every hello and goodbye, plus du vs. Sie. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #german-greetings #culture #austria #switzerland #beginner
GermanNow How to Memorize German Vocabulary Fast Memorize German vocabulary fast with a five-step workflow: drill the top 100 words, learn nouns with their article, color-code gender, and use spaced repetition GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #vocabulary #memorization #spaced-repetition #der-die-das #beginner
GermanNow How to Tell Time in German Without Mistakes Halb sieben means 6:30, not 7:30. Master telling time in German — Viertel nach, halb, vor, the 24-hour clock, and the prepositions that trip up beginners. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 5 min read #telling-time #vocabulary #beginner #travel
GermanNow Weil vs Denn vs Da: "Because" in German Weil and da send the verb to the end; denn keeps it in second position. Here's how to pick the right German "because" and place the verb correctly. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #weil-vs-denn #conjunctions #word-order #grammar #beginner
GermanNow Wo, Wohin, Woher: Three Ways to Say Where German splits where into three: wo (location), wohin (destination), and woher (origin). Learn the wo vs wohin rule, the hin/her logic, and common mistakes. GermanNow June 5, 2026 • 6 min read #wo-wohin-woher #adverbs #hin-her #beginner