A personified yak German teacher that explains German articles der die das and article declensions for beginners.

German Definite And Indefinite Articles: Der, Die, Das And Their Declensions

German articles look small, innocent, and harmless. Then they start changing shape like tiny grammar goblins. The good news: there is a system, and it is very learnable.

In this guide, you will learn the definite articles der, die, das, the indefinite articles ein, eine, and how they change in the four German cases: nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive. No drama. Just patterns, examples, and a few memory tricks that actually help.

Yak Box: What Articles Actually Do

An article is the little word before a noun. In German, the article shows gender and often also the case. So yes, the tiny word is doing suspiciously large amounts of work.

  • der = the for many masculine nouns.
    Example: Der Mann ist müde. = The man is tired.
  • die = the for feminine nouns and all plural nouns.
    Example: Die Frau lacht. = The woman is laughing.
  • das = the for many neuter nouns.
    Example: Das Kind schläft. = The child is sleeping.
  • ein / eine = a / an.
    Example: Ein Hund bellt. = A dog is barking.

The Three Genders In German

German nouns have grammatical gender. That does not mean objects have secret biological lives. It just means each noun belongs to a grammar category.

der

Meaning: the (masculine)

Example: Der Kaffee ist heiß.
The coffee is hot.

die

Meaning: the (feminine)

Example: Die Tasche ist neu.
The bag is new.

das

Meaning: the (neuter)

Example: Das Auto ist schnell.
The car is fast.

Plural is simpler: die is the definite article for all plural nouns in the nominative and accusative.

die Kinder = the children
Die Kinder spielen im Garten. = The children are playing in the garden.

The Four Cases Without Tears

Cases show the job a noun is doing in the sentence. That is why the article changes.

  • Nominative = the subject, the doer.
    Der Hund schläft. = The dog is sleeping.
  • Accusative = the direct object, the thing directly affected.
    Ich sehe den Hund. = I see the dog.
  • Dative = the indirect object, often “to” or “for” someone.
    Ich gebe dem Hund Wasser. = I give the dog water.
  • Genitive = possession, often “of.”
    Die Farbe des Autos ist rot. = The color of the car is red.

Rule → Example

The noun usually stays the same, but the article changes.

der Hund = the dog (subject)
Der Hund schläft. = The dog is sleeping.

den Hund = the dog (direct object)
Ich sehe den Hund. = I see the dog.

dem Hund = to the dog
Ich helfe dem Hund. = I help the dog.

des Hundes = of the dog
Das Spielzeug des Hundes ist blau. = The dog’s toy is blue.

Definite Articles: Full Declension Table

CaseMasculineFeminineNeuterPlural
Nominativederdiedasdie
Accusativedendiedasdie
Dativedemderdemden
Genitivedesderdesder

That table is the big one. Stick with it long enough, and German starts looking less rude and more logical.

Definite Article Forms With Meaning And Examples

German FormEnglish Meaning / UseExample Sentence
der Mannthe man (subject)Der Mann arbeitet heute.
The man is working today.
den Mannthe man (direct object)Ich kenne den Mann.
I know the man.
dem Mannto the man / for the manIch gebe dem Mann das Buch.
I give the man the book.
des Mannesof the manDas Auto des Mannes ist alt.
The man’s car is old.
die Frauthe womanDie Frau liest die Zeitung.
The woman is reading the newspaper.
der Frauto the woman / of the womanIch antworte der Frau.
I answer the woman.
das Kindthe childDas Kind malt ein Bild.
The child is drawing a picture.
dem Kindto the childWir helfen dem Kind.
We help the child.
des Kindesof the childDer Ball des Kindes ist im Garten.
The child’s ball is in the garden.
die Kinderthe childrenDie Kinder sind laut.
The children are loud.
den Kindernto the childrenIch gebe den Kindern Saft.
I give the children juice.
der Kinderof the childrenDie Schule der Kinder ist nah.
The children’s school is nearby.

Indefinite Articles: Ein And Eine

Indefinite articles mean a or an. German has no plural form of a/an, because “a books” is not a thing in English either, and thankfully German agrees.

In the nominative, the base forms are:

  • ein Mann = a man
    Ein Mann wartet draußen. = A man is waiting outside.
  • eine Frau = a woman
    Eine Frau singt. = A woman is singing.
  • ein Kind = a child
    Ein Kind spielt im Park. = A child is playing in the park.

Indefinite Article Declension Table

CaseMasculineFeminineNeuter
Nominativeeineineein
Accusativeeineneineein
Dativeeinemeinereinem
Genitiveeineseinereines

The pattern is very close to the definite articles, just with fewer forms. German does enjoy patterns. It just hides them for sport.

Indefinite Article Forms With Meaning And Examples

German FormEnglish Meaning / UseExample Sentence
ein Manna man (subject)Ein Mann ruft an.
A man is calling.
einen Manna man (direct object)Ich sehe einen Mann.
I see a man.
einem Mannto a manIch schreibe einem Mann.
I am writing to a man.
eines Mannesof a manDer Hund eines Mannes bellt.
A man’s dog is barking.
eine Fraua womanEine Frau arbeitet hier.
A woman works here.
einer Frauto a woman / of a womanIch helfe einer Frau.
I help a woman.
ein Kinda childEin Kind lacht.
A child is laughing.
einem Kindto a childSie gibt einem Kind einen Apfel.
She gives a child an apple.
eines Kindesof a childDas Zimmer eines Kindes ist bunt.
A child’s room is colorful.

How To Know Which Case You Need

Here is the beginner-friendly shortcut:

  • Who is doing the action? Use nominative.
    Der Lehrer erklärt die Regel. = The teacher explains the rule.
  • Who or what receives the action directly? Use accusative.
    Ich kaufe das Buch. = I am buying the book.
  • To whom? For whom? Use dative.
    Ich gebe der Lehrerin das Buch. = I give the teacher the book.
  • Whose? Of what? Use genitive.
    Der Name des Lehrers ist Karl. = The teacher’s name is Karl.

Mini Pattern Table

PatternMeaningExample 1Example 2
der → denMasculine changes in accusativeDer Film ist lang.
The film is long.
Ich sehe den Film.
I see the film.
der / das → demMasculine and neuter in dativeIch helfe dem Bruder.
I help the brother.
Ich danke dem Kind.
I thank the child.
des / einesMasculine and neuter in genitiveDie Farbe des Hauses ist weiß.
The color of the house is white.
Die Tür eines Autos ist offen.
A car door is open.

The Fastest Memory Tricks

  • Masculine accusative is the famous troublemaker.
    der becomes den, and ein becomes einen.
    Ich habe einen Bruder. = I have a brother.
  • Dative often sounds like -m or -r.
    dem, einem, der, einer
    Ich spreche mit einer Freundin. = I am speaking with a female friend.
  • Genitive often looks fancy and slightly old-school.
    des, eines
    Das Dach des Hauses ist neu. = The roof of the house is new.
  • Plural dative adds -n to many nouns.
    den Kindern = to the children
    Ich gebe den Kindern Schokolade. = I give the children chocolate.

Common Mistakes And Easy Fixes

  • Mistake: using der Mann after a verb that needs accusative.
    Wrong: Ich sehe der Mann.
    Right: Ich sehe den Mann.
    I see the man.
  • Mistake: forgetting that feminine accusative stays the same.
    Right: Ich kenne die Frau.
    I know the woman.
  • Mistake: mixing up dative and accusative after a verb like helfen.
    helfen = to help
    Ich helfe dem Kind. = I help the child.
  • Mistake: forgetting there is no plural indefinite article.
    Kinder spielen draußen. = Children are playing outside.
  • Mistake: ignoring genitive endings in formal German.
    des Mannes = of the man
    Das Haus des Mannes ist groß. = The man’s house is big.

Practice Section

Try these before peeking at the answers. Your future German-speaking self will be mildly impressed.

Choose The Correct Article

  1. Ich sehe ___ Hund.
    I see the dog.
  2. Sie gibt ___ Kind ein Buch.
    She gives the child a book.
  3. Das ist das Auto ___ Mannes.
    That is the man’s car.
  4. ___ Frau ist meine Lehrerin.
    The woman is my teacher.
  5. Wir haben ___ Katze.
    We have a cat.
Answers
  1. denIch sehe den Hund.
  2. demSie gibt dem Kind ein Buch.
  3. desDas ist das Auto des Mannes.
  4. DieDie Frau ist meine Lehrerin.
  5. eineWir haben eine Katze.

Swap The Case

Change the bold noun phrase to the new case.

  • der Lehrer → accusative = den Lehrer
    Ich kenne den Lehrer. = I know the teacher.
  • ein Hund → dative = einem Hund
    Ich gebe einem Hund Wasser. = I give water to a dog.
  • das Haus → genitive = des Hauses
    Die Tür des Hauses ist offen. = The door of the house is open.

Quick Reference Summary

CaseMain QuestionDefinite Article ExampleIndefinite Article Example
NominativeWho / what does the action?der Tisch = the table
Der Tisch ist groß.
ein Tisch = a table
Ein Tisch steht dort.
AccusativeWho / what receives the action?den Tisch = the table
Ich putze den Tisch.
einen Tisch = a table
Ich kaufe einen Tisch.
DativeTo whom? For whom?dem Tisch = to the table
Ich nähere mich dem Tisch.
einem Tisch = to a table
Ich gebe einem Tisch eine Nummer.
GenitiveWhose? Of what?des Tisches = of the table
Die Farbe des Tisches ist braun.
eines Tisches = of a table
Die Ecke eines Tisches ist kaputt.

Final Yak

The core idea is simple: articles show gender and case. Learn the nominative forms first, then drill the big changes: der → den in the masculine accusative, dem for many dative forms, and des / eines for genitive. Once those stop feeling cursed, the rest gets much easier.

Do not try to memorize the whole universe at once. Start with one noun, move it through the cases, and let the pattern sink in. Tiny grammar goblins hate consistency. That is why it works.