The V2 Rule (Verb-Zweit-Regel) A2
▾In every German main clause, the finite (conjugated) verb always occupies position 2 — no exceptions. Position 1 can hold any single element: the subject, an object, an adverb, or even an entire subordinate clause. Whenever something other than the subject fills position 1, the subject shifts to position 3 — this is called inversion.
Subject first — no inversion
Adverb first — inversion!
Object or place first — inversion!
Subordinate clause first — inversion!
Normal Word Order (Grundwortstellung) A2
▾When the subject comes first, German word order looks like English: Subject → Verb → Other elements. The tricky part is ordering two objects: an indirect object (Dativ) and a direct object (Akkusativ). The rule depends on whether the objects are nouns or pronouns.
Two noun objects — Dativ before Akkusativ
When both objects are nouns, the Dativ (indirect) object comes before the Akkusativ (direct) object.
Pronoun Akkusativ object — pronoun before Dativ noun
When the Akkusativ object is a pronoun, it jumps to the front — before the Dativ noun.
Both pronoun objects — Akkusativ before Dativ
When both objects are pronouns, Akkusativ comes before Dativ.
Questions (Fragen) A2
▾German has three question types. Yes/no questions put the verb first (V1). W-questions put the question word in P1 and verb in P2 (V2). Indirect/embedded questions behave like subordinate clauses — verb goes to the end.
Yes/no questions — Verb first (V1)
W-questions — Question word + Verb + Subject
Indirect/embedded questions — Verb final
When a question is embedded inside another clause (after wissen, fragen, sagen, etc.), the question word acts as a subordinating conjunction — the verb moves to the end.
Time – Manner – Place (TeKaMoLo) B1
▾When a sentence contains multiple adverbials, German follows a default sequence called TeKaMoLo (from German: Temporal – Kausal – Modal – Lokal). In English terms: Time → Cause → Manner → Place. This is the unmarked, neutral order. You can deviate for emphasis, but violations sound unnatural to native ears.
Correct TeKaMoLo order
Correct vs. incorrect order
More complete examples
Subordinate Clauses — Verb Final (Nebensatz: Verbendstellung) B1
▾Subordinating conjunctions introduce a dependent clause and send the finite verb to the very end of that clause. In compound tenses (Perfekt, Plusquamperfekt), the auxiliary (haben/sein) comes last, after the Partizip II. With modal verbs, the modal is last.
Common subordinating conjunctions
| Conjunction | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| weil | because | …weil er krank ist. |
| dass | that | …dass sie morgen kommt. |
| obwohl | although | …obwohl es regnet, gehen wir raus. |
| wenn | when / if (pres./fut.) | …wenn ich Zeit habe. |
| als | when (one-time past) | …als ich jung war. |
| ob | whether / if | …ob er kommt. |
| damit | so that | …damit er es versteht. |
| bevor | before | …bevor er geht. |
| nachdem | after | …nachdem sie gegessen hatte. |
| während | while | …während er schläft. |
| bis | until | …bis er zurückkommt. |
| seit / seitdem | since | …seit sie hier wohnt. |
| sobald | as soon as | …sobald er fertig ist. |
| falls | in case / if | …falls es regnet. |
| sodass | so that (result) | …sodass ich nicht schlafen konnte. |
Simple tense — verb to end
Perfekt in subordinate clause — auxiliary last
Modal verbs in subordinate clause — modal last
Separable Verbs in Sentences (Trennbare Verben) A2 B1
▾Separable verbs have a prefix (like an-, auf-, mit-, ab-, ein-, aus-) that splits off in main clauses. The prefix goes to the very end of the main clause. In subordinate clauses, the prefix reattaches because the whole verb goes to the end. In infinitive constructions, zu is inserted between the prefix and the verb stem.
Main clause — prefix at end
Subordinate clause — prefix stays attached
Infinitive with zu — prefix + zu + verb stem
Perfekt — ge- inserted between prefix and stem
Position of Nicht (Stellung von "nicht") B1
▾Nicht can negate an entire sentence (general/sentential negation) or just one specific element (partial negation). Its position changes depending on what is being negated. The basic rule: nicht tends toward the end — but must come before infinitives, Partizip II, separable prefixes, predicate adjectives/nouns, and prepositional phrases it negates.
General negation — nicht near end
Before infinitive / Partizip II / separable prefix
Before predicate adjective or noun
Partial negation — nicht directly before the element
To negate only a specific element, place nicht immediately before it. This shifts focus and often implies a contrast with sondern.
Emphasis and Fronting (Topikalisierung) B2
▾German's V2 rule is actually a powerful expressive tool: because the verb must stay in P2, you can move any constituent to P1 to make it the sentence's topic or to create contrast. The element in P1 receives the strongest emphasis. Meanwhile, new information tends to appear at the end of the clause.
Topicalization — moving elements to P1
New information last (end focus)
Old/known information tends to come early; new/important information tends to come last — this aligns with natural information flow (Informationsstruktur).
Contrast particles: zwar…aber / einerseits…andererseits
Complex Sentence Patterns (Komplexe Satzmuster) B2
▾Advanced German syntax involves relative clauses (Relativsätze), infinitive clauses with zu (Infinitivkonstruktionen), and extended participial phrases (Erweiterte Partizipialphrasen). All involve specific word-order consequences.
Relative clauses — verb to end, preceded by relative pronoun
A relative clause modifies a noun. The relative pronoun (matching the noun's gender/number) starts the clause and sends the finite verb to the end.
Infinitive clauses with zu
When zu + infinitive forms a clause (usually after verbs like versuchen, beginnen, vorhaben, versprechen, planen), the zu-infinitive goes to the end of the embedded clause. With separable verbs, zu is inserted: anzurufen.
um…zu / ohne…zu / anstatt…zu
Extended participial phrases (Erweiterte Partizipialphrase) — B2+
German can expand a participle into a full phrase inserted between the article and the noun. The participle stands at the end of the phrase (before the noun). Very common in formal/written German.