| Let's take a closer look at the conversation. |
| Do you remember how Sasha asks, |
| "Excuse me, do you have salt?" |
| Entschuldigung, haben Sie Salz? |
| First is Entschuldigung, meaning, “Excuse me.” Entschuldigung. Entschuldigung. |
| Next is haben, meaning "have." haben. haben. |
| Next is Sie, "you," in formal German. Sie. Sie. |
| Note Sie literally means “they,” but it's also a formal way to address a single person, as is the case here, where Sasha is addressing the clerk. |
| After that is Salz, “salt.” Salz. Salz. |
| All together, Entschuldigung, haben Sie Salz? This literally means “Excuse me, have you salt?” but translates as "Excuse me, [do] you have any salt?" |
| Entschuldigung, haben Sie Salz? |
| Let's take a closer look at the response. |
| Do you remember how the shop clerk says, |
| “Yes, the salt is here.” |
| Ja, das Salz ist hier. |
| This starts with the expression, ja, “yes.” ja. ja. |
| It answers Sasha's question, |
| Entschuldigung, haben Sie Salz? |
| “Excuse me, do you have salt?” |
| After that is das Salz, “the salt.” Das Salz. |
| Let’s start with Salz, “salt.” Salz. Salz. |
| In German, all nouns have grammatical gender and are either singular or plural. Salz is neuter and singular — a fact which will determine the form of other words in the sentence. |
| Before Salz is the article das. Think of it like “the” in English. Das (clearly ). Das. |
| Das is neuter, singular to agree with Salz. |
| Together, das Salz, “the salt.” Das Salz. |
| Next is ist, “is,” as in ‘the salt is…’” Ist. Ist. |
| Ist is from the verb sein “to be.” Sein. |
| Note: if the requested item is plural, such as die Eier, "eggs," the verb ist is replaced with sind, as in Die Eier, sind hier, "The eggs are here." |
| Last is hier, "here." Hier. Hier. |
| All together, it's Ja, das Salz ist hier. “Yes, the salt is here.” |
| Ja, das Salz ist hier. |
| The pattern is |
| Haben Sie ITEM? |
| Do you have ITEM? |
| Haben Sie ITEM? |
| To use this pattern, simply replace the {ITEM} placeholder with the thing you’re looking for. |
| Note: This pattern requires a noun. |
| Imagine you’re looking for milk. |
| Milch. “Milk.” Milch. Milch. |
| Say, “Do you have milk?” |
| Ready? |
| Haben Sie Milch? |
| "Do you have milk?" |
| Haben Sie Milch? |
| For this lesson, let’s review definite articles for singular nouns. |
| The definite article is like the English “the,” as in “the milk.” Die Milch. |
| The masculine definite article is der, as in der Zucker, “the sugar.” |
| The feminine definite article is die, as in die Pizza, “the pizza.” |
| The neuter definite article is das, as in das Salz, "the salt." |
| Some items are usually put into the plural form. For example, eggs. Die Eier. Die Eier. |
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