Überblick (Overview)
▾Every German noun has a grammatical gender — masculine (der), feminine (die), or neuter (das). Gender is largely unpredictable from meaning, but dozens of reliable patterns based on suffixes, word categories, and word origin can guide you. Until you recognise the patterns, the safest strategy is to memorise each noun with its article: not Tisch (table) but der Tisch.
Quick example — one noun of each gender
Gender by suffix — the fastest patterns to learn
| Suffix | Gender | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| -ung | die (fem.) | die Zeitung, die Wohnung, die Meinung |
| -heit / -keit | die (fem.) | die Freiheit, die Möglichkeit |
| -schaft | die (fem.) | die Freundschaft, die Wirtschaft |
| -tion / -sion | die (fem.) | die Nation, die Version |
| -tät | die (fem.) | die Qualität, die Universität |
| -ik | die (fem.) | die Musik, die Physik |
| -er (agent) | der (masc.) | der Lehrer, der Fahrer, der Bäcker |
| -ling | der (masc.) | der Frühling, der Lehrling |
| -ismus | der (masc.) | der Tourismus, der Kapitalismus |
| -chen / -lein | das (neut.) | das Mädchen, das Büchlein |
| -um | das (neut.) | das Datum, das Museum |
| -ment | das (neut.) | das Dokument, das Instrument |
Maskulinum (Masculine Nouns — der)
▾Masculine nouns use der in the Nominative. The following categories and suffixes are almost always masculine.
Masculine vocabulary list — 32 nouns
Examples in sentences
Femininum (Feminine Nouns — die)
▾Feminine nouns use die in the Nominative. The suffix rules for feminine nouns are especially reliable — if you see -ung, -heit, -keit, or -tion, the noun is almost certainly feminine.
Feminine vocabulary list — 32 nouns
Examples in sentences
Neutrum (Neuter Nouns — das)
▾Neuter nouns use das in the Nominative. Diminutives in -chen and -lein are always neuter — even if the biological referent is female (das Mädchen).
Neuter vocabulary list — 32 nouns
Examples in sentences
Pluralformen (Noun Plurals)
▾German plural forms must also be memorised with each noun, but six main patterns cover most cases. All plural nouns take die as their article in the Nominative, regardless of singular gender.
The 6 plural patterns
| # | Pattern | Typical gender | Singular → Plural |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | No change | mostly masc. -er | der Lehrer → die Lehrer | der Fahrer → die Fahrer |
| 2 | Umlaut only | masc. & fem. | der Vater → die Väter | die Mutter → die Mütter |
| 3 | + -e (often + Umlaut) | mostly masc. | der Tag → die Tage | die Hand → die Hände |
| 4 | + -er (often + Umlaut) | mostly neut. | das Kind → die Kinder | das Buch → die Bücher |
| 5 | + -en / -n | mostly fem. | die Frau → die Frauen | die Blume → die Blumen |
| 6 | + -s (loanwords) | all genders | das Auto → die Autos | das Kino → die Kinos |
20 singular → plural pairs
Komposita (Compound Nouns)
▾German freely joins two or more nouns into one word. The last element (the Grundwort) determines the gender and plural of the compound. Preceding elements modify the meaning. No spaces — everything written as one word.
Linking elements — Fugenlaute
When joining words, German sometimes inserts a linking element between parts: -s-, -n-, -e-, -es-, or nothing. There is no fully predictable rule — memorise the common ones.
| Linking element | Example compound | Components |
|---|---|---|
| -s- | das Arbeitsamt | die Arbeit + das Amt |
| -s- | der Geburtstag | die Geburt + der Tag |
| -s- | die Freundschaftsring | die Freundschaft + der Ring |
| -n- | die Blumenerde | die Blume + die Erde |
| -en- | der Sonnenschein | die Sonne + der Schein |
| (none) | das Haustier | das Haus + das Tier |
15 compound examples with gender derivation
Genus-Fallen (Gender Traps)
▾These are the nouns that learners most often get wrong — either because the gender contradicts biological expectation, pairs with confusing near-twins, or simply defies pattern. Learn these by heart.