Let's take a closer look at the conversation. |
Do you remember how Mark asks, |
"Are you a student?" |
Bist du Student? |
First is bist, "are" when using informal German. Bist. Bist. |
Bist is from the verb sein, meaning "to be." Sein. |
Next is the informal personal pronoun du. "You." Du. Du. |
Next is Student, "student." Student. Student. |
In German, all nouns have grammatical gender and are either singular or plural. Student is masculine singular. |
All together, Bist du Student? "Are you a student?" Bist du Student? |
Note: Bist du Student is the informal form of "Are you a student?" |
Note, to make the question formal, replace bist du with sind Sie, which is the formal way of asking "are you?" |
Therefore in a formal setting: |
Sind Sie Student? Are you a student? Sind Sie Student? |
You should be aware of this, but you won’t need it for this lesson. |
Now, let's take a closer look at the response. |
Do you remember how Marvin says, |
"No, I'm not a student. I'm an investor." |
Nein, ich bin kein Student. Ich bin Investor. |
First is the expression, nein, meaning, "no." Nein. Nein. |
It answers Mark's yes-or-no question, "Are you a student?" Bist du Student? |
After this, Marvin specifies that he’s not a student. Ich bin kein Student. "I'm not a student." Ich bin kein Student. |
Let's start with the word, Student, "student." Student. Student. |
In German, all nouns have grammatical gender and are either singular or plural. Student is masculine and singular — a fact which will determine the form of other words in the sentence. |
Before Student is kein, a phrase meaning "not a," in this case. Kein. Kein. |
Kein is masculine and singular to agree with Student. |
Together, it's kein Student, literally "not a student." Kein Student. |
Let’s move to the start of the sentence, ich, "I." Ich. Ich. |
Next is bin. "am." Bin. Bin. |
Bin is from the verb sein, meaning "to be." Sein. |
All together, Ich bin kein Student. "I'm not a student." Ich bin kein Student. |
Marvin then tells Mark his actual occupation. Ich bin Investor. "I'm an investor." Ich bin Investor. |
First, Ich "I." Ich. |
Next is bin, "am." Bin. |
Next is Investor. "Investor." Investor. Investor. |
Investor is a masculine singular noun. |
Together, Ich bin Investor, literally "I am investor," but it translates as "I'm an investor." Ich bin Investor. |
All together, Nein, ich bin kein Student. Ich bin Investor. |
"No, I'm not a student. I'm an investor." |
Nein, ich bin kein Student. Ich bin Investor. |
The pattern is |
Nein, ich bin kein OCCUPATION. Ich bin ACTUAL OCCUPATION. |
"No, I'm not OCCUPATION. I'm ACTUAL OCCUPATION." |
Nein, ich bin kein OCCUPATION. Ich bin ACTUAL OCCUPATION. |
To use this pattern, simply replace the OCCUPATION and ACTUAL OCCUPATION placeholders with the occupations that are appropriate to the conversation. |
Note: This pattern requires nouns. Their gender will depend on the gender of the speaker. |
Imagine you’re Emma Eckert a student. The word for a female student is Studentin. Studentin. Studentin. |
Marvin Maas asks you if you’re a teacher, Lehrerin. Lehrerin. Lehrerin. |
Lehrerin is feminine singular; therefore, keine is feminine singular to agree with Lehrerin. |
Together, keine Lehrerin, “not a teacher.” Keine Lehrerin. |
Say |
"No, I'm not a teacher. I'm a student." |
Ready? |
Nein, ich bin keine Lehrerin. Ich bin Studentin. |
"No, I'm not a teacher. I'm a student." |
Nein, ich bin keine Lehrerin. Ich bin Studentin. |
In German, a general rule of thumb is occupation words that end -in are feminine, while those that do not are masculine. |
Lehrer, |
Lehrerin. |
If the masculine form contains the word Mann meaning "man," it’s usually replaced by the word Frau meaning "woman." |
Bürokaufmann. "Office clerk" (male) |
Bürokauffrau. "Office clerk" (female) |
However, some occupations may have two different words for one occupation depending on gender. |
Krankenpfleger. "Nurse." (male) |
Krankenschwester. "Nurse." (female) |
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