This Goethe A1 German vocabulary list is for learners who want a cleaner way to review the words that actually matter at beginner level. It focuses on practical everyday German you can use for introductions, transport, food, daily routines, simple questions, and first conversations.
Each row gives you the German headword, a plain-English meaning, and a short example sentence so you can study the word in context instead of memorising it in isolation. Because this list also has audio, you can listen, repeat, and then use the free PDF button under the table when you want an offline study copy.
As a CEFR-aligned A1 list, this is not about sounding advanced. It is about building the core vocabulary that helps you understand beginner lessons, fill out simple forms, and say useful things clearly and confidently.
When you finish this list, keep going in the Yak Yacker German section for more beginner-friendly vocabulary, phrases, and grammar reference pages.
Making the Most of Goethe A1 Vocabulary
A CEFR-aligned A1 list should give you the words that carry everyday beginner German, not a pile of impressive extras you are unlikely to use soon. That means greetings, numbers, family, food, transport, daily routines, basic verbs, question words, and the kind of vocabulary that shows up in first conversations, simple forms, and beginner exams.
The most useful way to study a list like this is not as random flashcards, but as building material for short real sentences. When you learn a word like arbeiten, heute, or Bahnhof, connect it to a plain example you can actually picture or reuse. That helps you move from passive recognition into active use much faster.
This table works best when you use the meaning, example sentence, and audio together. Listen, repeat, and then try writing or saying a few simple sentences of your own. That turns the list into something practical, and it gets you closer to the kind of German you need for real A1 situations rather than just list-memorizing.
Goethe A1 German Vocabulary Quiz
Try the quiz first if you want a quick confidence check, or use it after the list as a simple review round.
Goethe A1 German Vocabulary List
| Word | Type | Meaning | Example | Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| hören | Other | to listen | Hör mal! Was ist das? | |
| ich | Other | I | Ich heiße Veronika. | |
| ihm/ihr | Other | him/her | Gib ihm/ihr bitte das Buch. | |
| ihn | Other | him | Ruf ihn bitte an. | |
| immer | Other | always | Frau Bast kommt immer zu spät. | |
| in | Other | in | Ich wohne in Wiesbaden. | |
| international | Other | international | Unser Deutschkurs ist international: Silvana kommt aus Italien, Conchi aus Spanien, Yin aus China ... | |
| ja | Other | yes | Sind Sie Herr Watanabe? / Ja. | |
| jed- | Other | every | Blumen kannst du in jedem Bahnhof kaufen. | |
| jetzt | Other | now | Jetzt machen wir eine Pause. | |
| jung | Other | young | Claudia ist 21. / Was? Noch so jung? | |
| kaputt | Other | … | Das Glas war teuer. Es geht sehr leicht kaputt. | |
| kaufen | Other | to buy | Tim kauft sich ein neues Auto. | |
| kein | Other | no/none | Es gibt keine Eintrittskarten mehr. | |
| kennen | Other | to know | Kennen Sie diese Frau? / Nein, leider nicht. | |
| kennenlernen | Other | to get to know | Wir sind neu hier. Wir möchten Sie kennenlernen. | |
| klar | Other | of course / naturally | Kommst du mit? / Klar! | |
| klein | Other | small | Eltville ist eine kleine Stadt am Rhein. | |
| kochen | Other | to cook | Herr Georgi kann gut kochen. | |
| kommen | Other | to come | Woher kommen Sie? / Aus Frankreich. | |
| können | Other | to be able to | Ich kann Deutsch und Russisch. | |
| kosten | Other | to cost | Wie viel kostet das? / 10 Euro. | |
| krank | Other | ill | Ich kann heute nicht zur Arbeit kommen, ich bin krank und liege im Bett. | |
| kriegen | Other | to get | Ich kriege 15 Euro in der Stunde für meine Arbeit. | |
| kulturell | Other | cultural | Die Geschichte ist kulturell wichtig. |




