Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
Veter
sentence order.
As far as I know, we can put a verb before the subject as in this sentence: "In zwei Monaten beginnt mein Urlaub." What's the reason for this shift? Will it be correct to say: "Meun Urlaub beginnt in zwei Monaten". Or "In zwei Monaten mein Urlaub beginnt."
What about these sentences:
"Ich wohne in Berlin" - I know this is correct.
"In Berlin wohne ich" - i followed the same logic as in the first sentence anout Urlaub.
"In Berlin ich wohne" - correct?
Viele Dank.
11 juil. 2014 18:30
Réponses · 6
2
German word order is very flexible. You can even put object before the verb. And not only subject or object but any part of a sentence keeping in mind the verb has to be at the second position.
Example:
Mein Urlaub beginnt in zwei Monaten. You can rearrange it in many ways.
in zwei monaten "beginnt" (verb at 2nd position) mein Urlaub
Another example:
Ich liebe dich. You can also say,
dich liebe ich. (in English you cannot say, "You love I", but it is possible in German) :)
The meaning does not change as it is clear what is subject and what is the object.
The reason for the shift is that it is for making stress in a sentence.
If you are stressing "dich" and not any other person.
Dich liebe ich, aber ihn mag ich.
Ihnen wünsche ich ein schönes Wochenende! :)
12 juillet 2014
1
As far as I know, we can put a verb before the subject as in this sentence: "In zwei Monaten beginnt mein Urlaub." What's the reason for this shift?
-> I am sorry that I can't answer the question directly but maybe my comments help you:
Will it be correct to say: "Meun Urlaub beginnt in zwei Monaten".
-> Yes
Or "In zwei Monaten mein Urlaub beginnt."
-> No
What about these sentences:
"Ich wohne in Berlin" - I know this is correct.
-> yes
"In Berlin wohne ich" - i followed the same logic as in the first sentence anout Urlaub.
-> It is not wrong but would get used different. For example you can say "In Berlin wohne ich, aber ich arbeite in Potsdam". (I live in Berlin but I work is in Potsdam).
"In Berlin ich wohne" - correct?
-> No
11 juillet 2014
1
German is a "V2" language (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V2_word_order), the (finite part of) the verb always has to be in the second position in a main clause. Your last example has the verb in the third position, so it's wrong.
12 juillet 2014
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Veter
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Allemand, Russe
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Allemand
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