Most Common German Nouns PDF Download and Quiz

Nouns are the quiet workhorses of German-without them, you can’t name a single thing around you. This list hands you around 1,000 of the most common German nouns you’ll actually hear at the bakery, in an email, or while making weekend plans. No dusty textbook relics, just the practical words that help you sound less like a classroom robot and more like yourself.

Every noun comes with a straightforward meaning and a natural example sentence, so you see exactly how it behaves in real German. Because seeing a word is one thing-hearing it’s another-we’ve added audio playback next to each entry, so you can check your pronunciation on the spot. When life pulls you offline, grab the free PDF from the button just below the table and study anywhere, no signal needed.

This collection isn’t tied to a single test or level. It’s for any German learner who wants a clean, at-a-glance reference of high-frequency nouns. Start with the words you meet most often, then let the rest grow naturally as you scroll.

If this topic helped, explore more in our German learning section. it’s the easiest way to keep building related vocabulary without jumping around the web.

Quick Quiz

You’ve scanned a few nouns-now see how many you can call up from memory. Take the short quiz below before you dive into the full list; it’s a low-stress way to spot which words are ready to stick.

Browse the Full List

WordTypeMeaningAudio
KursNouncourse
KussNounkiss
KüsteNounsea coast
LaborNounlaboratory, lab
LageNounposition
LagerNounbed
LampeNounlamp
LandNounland
LandschaftNounlandscape, countryside, scenery
LandungNounlanding, touchdown
LängeNounlength
LärmNounnoise
LauneNounmood, humor, humour, temper
LautsprecherNounloudspeaker, speaker
LebenslaufNouncourse of ones life
LebensmittelNounfood, foodstuffs, foods, groceries
LederNounleather
LehreNountheory, science
LehrerNounteacher, instructor
LeistungNounperformance
LeiterNounmanaging director, manager, head
LeitungNounmanagement
LeserNounreader
LeuteNounpeople
LiebeNounlove