German/Level I/Wie heißt du?

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Lesson 1 ~Wie heißt du?

A scenic picture a fountain in Schönbuch, Germany

This lesson will deal with simple conversation topics such as greeting people, saying goodbye, and asking people how they are feeling, the alphabet, and nominative case pronouns and articles. This lesson also has soundbites so that you can learn how to pronounce everything, including the alphabet and some introductory verbs.

Contents

[edit] Dialogue

German Dialogue • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio: OneTwo (131 + 142 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg What's your name? Flag of Switzerland.svg Wie heißt du? Flag of Austria.svg
Franz Hallo, ich bin Franz. Wie heißt du?
Greta Hallo, Franz. Ich heiße Greta. Wie geht's?
Franz Es geht mir gut. Kennst du den Lehrer?
Greta Ja, er heißt Herr Weiß.
Franz Oh, danke, Greta. Bis dann!
Greta Auf Wiedersehen!
Next Dialogue
Franz Guten Morgen. Sind Sie Herr Weiß?
Herr Schwarz Nein, ich bin Herr Schwarz. Wie heißt du?
Franz Ich heiße Franz. Danke Herr Schwarz. Ich bin spät dran.
Herr Schwarz Bitte, Franz. Ich bin auch spät dran. Bis später!
Franz Auf Wiedersehen!

[edit] Hellos and Goodbyes in German

German Vocabulary • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •144 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg Greetings Flag of Switzerland.svg Grüße Flag of Austria.svg
Hello! Hallo!*
Moin Moin! (used in northern Germany)
Moin! (used in northern Germany, shorter)
Grüß Gott! (used in southern Germany, Austria and South Tyrol)
Glück auf! (used from miners)
Servus! (used in eastern austria, informal)
Hi! (pronounced as in English, although colloquial and only used by the younger generation)
Good morning! Guten Morgen!*
Morgen! (shorter)
Good day! Guten Tag!*
Tag! (used in Germany, shorter)
Tagchen! (used in Germany, shorter)
Good evening! Guten Abend!*
Goodbye! Auf Wiedersehen!*
Bye! Tschüss!*
Ciao! (pronounced as in Italian)
Servus! (used in eastern austria, informal)
Tschöö! (used around Cologne)
Ade! (used in Swabia)
Auf Wiedersehen!
Leb wohl! (normally used if meeting again is not expected!)
See you later! Bis später!*, Bis dann!*
Good night! Gute Nacht!*

You will need to know each expression with an asterisk (*) after it. The others, of course, would be useful to know if you are traveling to regions where they are used. (As you can see, the different German-speaking regions often have their own ways of saying hello and goodbye. However, you will not be required to know any of these less common phrases for any problems or tests.)

[edit] Formal and Informal Greetings in German

Germans respect higher authority with their choice of certain phrases. The more formal phrases above are Guten Morgen, Guten Tag, and Auf Wiedersehen (as well as Grüß Gott). The least formal one is Tschüss. The others are neutral on the formal - informal scale.

Note: In Germany nowadays, "Tschüss" is also used with people who are not on first name terms.

Here are some examples:

  • Claudia: Guten Morgen, Herr Wagner!
  • Herr Wagner: Hallo, Claudia!
  • Birgit: Tschüss, Susi!
  • Susi: Bis später, Birgit!


German Vocabulary • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (how to upload)
Flag of Germany.svg Mr. & Ms. Flag of Switzerland.svg Herr und Frau Flag of Austria.svg
Mr. Herr
Ms. Frau
Miss Fräulein

For most women Fräulein is a bad word. They hate it because it sounds like that they're not real women only why they're not married. So Frau is used for unmarried and married women. But Fräulein is mostly a word to tell a girl that she's done something bad, like Was hast du wieder angestellt, junges Fräulein? (What have you done again, young Miss?) or to annoy little girls.

[edit] The German Alphabet

German Grammar • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •690 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg The Alphabet Flag of Switzerland.svg Das Alphabet Flag of Austria.svg
Characters Aa Ää Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii
Pronunciation ah äh beh tseh deh eh ef geh hah ee
Characters Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Öö Pp Qq Rr
Pronunciation yot kah el em en oh öh peh coo är
Characters Ss ß Tt Uu Üü Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz
Pronunciation ess eszett tay oo üh fow veh iks ypsilon tset


The 26 letters in both German and English are shown above. One, the ligature ß (eszett, ess-tset), is used in case two s's (ss) are needed or when a single s can't be used: between vowels or in the end of words when the preceding vowel is long. Example: "der Fluss" (short u, English river), but "der Fuß" (long u, English foot). Note that the eszett is not used in Switzerland. You always write double s instead, even after long vowels. Therefore you write "Fluss" and "Fuss".

Another difference between German and English is the Umlaut. The vowels a, o, and u can take an Umlaut (double dots above), becoming ä, ö, and ü. The Umlaut changes the sound of the vowel. For pronunciations of all the letters, go to the Pronunciation Guide.

Notes:

  • Umlaute are even used when spelling. Common words used to clarify a given letter are Ärger (anger), Ökonom (economist) and Übermut (high spirits). To say "Umlaut" after the letter is an English custom used when spelling German words in English.
  • In writing, the Umlaute are sometimes substituted with the vowel plus e, i.e ae, oe and ue. You find this in names as Goethe or in crosswords, but you don't use it in normal texts (Goethe is an exception to the rules governing Umlaute, always written with "oe"). However, if you have no way to type Umlaute you must use vowel-plus-e.
  • In most search engines and online dictionaries, a vowel with Umlaut can be entered as either the simple vowel or in vowel-plus-e form. For example, if you wish to find "Ärger" you may enter any of the following three search strings: "Ärger", "Aerger", "Arger" (the last is actually incorrect, because "Arger" means "grimmer"). Unless you have a German keyboard, to get the special German letters you will have to do one of two things. On a Macintosh, hold down the "option" key and type "u" (this will create an Umlaut), then let go of "option" and type the vowel you want to put the Umlaut on. In Windows, you will need to use the Alt key and numbers from the right side of your keyboard.


German Ect. • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •112 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg Alt keys for Flag of Switzerland.svg German characters Flag of Austria.svg
ß alt + 0223
ü alt + 0252
Ü alt + 0220
ö alt + 0246
Ö alt + 0214
ä alt + 0228
Ä alt + 0196


If you use Mac OS X these will work only if you choose "Unicode" keyboard layout, but you can add umlauts with option-u and the ß with option-S.

[edit] Bitte buchstabieren Sie

Look at this short phone conversation. Try to read it aloud. The translation of words and phrases is given below the text.

German Dialogue • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •405 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg Directory Assistance Flag of Switzerland.svg Fernsprechauskunft Flag of Austria.svg
Man A Auskunft, Guten Tag.
Man B Guten Tag. Ich hätte gern die Telefonnummer von Frau Claudia Bolliger aus Bern.
Man A Wie schreibt man das? Bitte buchstabieren Sie.
Man B Natürlich. Claudia: C wie Cäsar, L wie Ludwig, A wie Anton, U wie Ursula, D wie Dora, I wie Ida, A
wie Anton. Bolliger: B wie Berta, O wie Otto, zweimal L wie Ludwig, I wie Ida, G wie Gustav, E wie
Emil und R wie Richard.
Man A Danke. Die Nummer lautet ...


Vocabulary and Phrases (from above)

German Vocabulary • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •441 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg Vocabulary Flag of Switzerland.svg Wortschatz Flag of Austria.svg
English German
Information Desk die Auskunft (no plural)
I would like to have Ich hätte gern(e)
Phone Number die Telefonnummer
from Berne aus Bern
How do you spell this? Wie buchstabiert man das?
Please bitte
Spell buchstabieren
Of course natürlich
"A" as in Anton A wie Anton
Twice zweimal
The number is die Nummer lautet

[edit] Nominative Case

Cases describe what a noun or pronoun does in a sentence. When a noun or pronoun is the subject of a sentence, it is considered to be in the nominative case. For example, in the sentence "I ate an apple", I is the subject and the apple is the direct object. You will learn more about cases as the course continues.

German Grammar • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •87 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg Subject Pronouns Flag of Switzerland.svg Subjekt-Pronomina Flag of Austria.svg
1st person singular ich I
plural wir we
2nd person singular du, *Sie you
plural ihr, *Sie you
3rd person singular er, sie, es he, she, it
plural sie they

* - Sie is the formal (polite) version of du and ihr. In all conjugations, it acts exactly like sie (plural)

[edit] Names

German Grammar • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (how to upload)
Flag of Germany.svg Names Flag of Switzerland.svg Namen Flag of Austria.svg
English German
My name is... Ich heiße...
His/Her/Its name is... Er/Sie/Es heißt...
Their names are... Sie heißen...
Our names are... Wir heißen...
Your name is... Du heißt...
Your names are... Ihr heißt...
What is your name? Wie heißt du?
What are your names? Wie heißt ihr?
  • Remember, the formal way to ask someone's name is to ask "Wie heißen Sie?"
  • For more than one person, "Wie heißen..."


Note: There are possessive pronouns in German, they just don't apply here. For instance, "Mein Name ist..." would not be considered correct.


[edit] Verbs

You have already learned one verb: heißen, to be called.


German Verb • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •229 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg heißen Flag of Switzerland.svg to be called Flag of Austria.svg
Singular Plural
first person ich heiße my name is wir heißen our names are
second person du heißt your name is ihr heißt your names are
third person er heißt his name is sie heißen their names are
sie heißt her name is
es heißt its name is


Two more extremely common verbs are the German translations for 'to be' and 'to have': sein and haben. They are conjugated like this:


German Verb • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (how to upload)
Flag of Germany.svg sein Flag of Switzerland.svg to be Flag of Austria.svg
Singular Plural
first person ich bin I am wir sind we are
second person du bist you are ihr seid you are
third person er ist he is sie sind they are
sie ist she is
es ist it is
German Verb • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (how to upload)
Flag of Germany.svg haben Flag of Switzerland.svg to have Flag of Austria.svg
Singular Plural
first person ich habe I have wir haben we have
second person du hast you have ihr habt you have
third person er hat he has sie haben they have
sie hat she has
es hat it has

[edit] Wie geht's?

German Vocabulary • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (info •245 kb • help)
Flag of Germany.svg How are you? Flag of Switzerland.svg Wie geht's? Flag of Austria.svg
English German
How are you? Wie geht's?
How are you?(formal) Wie geht es Ihnen?
Responses for Good
Great Prima
Good Gut
Very good Sehr gut
Responses for Bad
Miserable Miserabel
Bad Schlecht
Not good Nicht gut
Responses for Okay
Okay Ganz gut
Okay (comes from English "Okay")
All right Es geht (so) / Geht so
So-so So lala

In Ordnung is also sometimes used for OK or Fine

Section Problems>>

[edit] Articles

German, like many other languages, gives each noun a gender: Masculine, Feminine or Neuter. Plural is easy; the definite nominative Article is always die. And as in English there is no indefinite article in plural. Nouns in plural form require different verb forms than nouns in singular.

In English, there are two different types of articles: definite (the) and indefinite (a and an). German is the same, except that there are five different articles of each type. The nominitive case articles are as follows:

[edit] Definite Articles

German Grammar • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (how to upload)
Flag of Germany.svg The Definite Article in the Nominative Case Flag of Switzerland.svg Der definitive Artikel des Nominativ Flag of Austria.svg
singular masculine der der Junge the boy
feminine die die Frau the woman
neuter das das Mädchen the girl
plural die die Jungen the boys
die Frauen the women
die Mädchen the girls
  • Note that girl is neuter.

[edit] Indefinite Articles

German Grammar • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (how to upload)
Flag of Germany.svg The Indefinite Article in the Nominative Case Flag of Switzerland.svg Der unbestimmte Artikel des Nominativ Flag of Austria.svg
singular masculine ein ein Mann a man
feminine eine eine Frau a woman
neuter ein ein Mädchen a girl


Section Problems>>

[edit] Forming Questions

The basic word order in a German sentence is the same as in English: Subject verb Objects. (SvO)

  • Der Junge spielt Fußball.
The boy plays football.

This sentence is in the indicative mood, the mood that states a fact. The interrogative mood asks a question. To change the English sentence "The boy throws the ball" to the interrogative mood, we insert the helper verb "does" before "boy," ending with,"?". "Does the boy throw the ball?"

The process is very similar in German. However, since German verbs express both the simple and progressive aspects, we switch the whole verb with the subject, ending up with,

  • "Spielt der Junge Fußball?"
Does the boy play football?

You have learned two questions so far: "Wie heißt...?" and "Wie geht's?". In German, there are two basic ways of forming a question. The first is the method described above. In addition to this, you can use an interrogative adverb...


German Vocabulary • Wie heißt du? • Gnome-speakernotes.pngaudio (how to upload)
Flag of Germany.svg Questions Flag of Switzerland.svg Fragen Flag of Austria.svg
English German
Who? Wer?
What? Was?
Where? Wo?
When? Wann?
Why? Warum?
How? Wie?
Which Welches?


The question "Wie heißt...?", literally translated, means "How is ... called?", though the latter is a sentence no native-English speaker would ever say (the correct English equivalent of the German being "What is ... called?"). That is why it does not contain Was ("Was heißt...?" means something like "What do you mean...?!") . These words come first in the sentence; the word order is: Interr. Adverb Verb Subject Object. For example:

  • Warum spielt der Junge Fußball?
Why does the boy play football?

You should note at this point that in German, the verb always comes second in the sentence, except in the case of a question as described above. The subject is always next to the verb, if not in front of it then following it. For example:

  • Der Junge spielte am Montag Fußball.
The boy played football on Monday.
  • Am Montag spielte der Junge Fußball.
On Monday, the boy played football.

At this point, you should know the words for "yes", ja and "no", nein respectively. There is also an emphatic "Yes!" called Jawohl!, although Jawohl! has military connotations and is often used as an answer to an order.

Section Problems>>

[edit] What's On the Test?

To go straight to the lesson test, go here.

The test consists of four parts: Grammar (18 points), Translation (34 points), Reading Comprehension (20 points) and Vocabulary (28 points). The Grammar section will test your ability to conjugate verbs according to the given infinitive and subject. You will also need to know the articles of certain nouns.

The Translation section is worth the most points, and it too has two sections. You must translate the sentences and phrases from English to German and vice versa.

The third section, Reading Comprehension, will be all "Fill in the Blanks". You will get two dialogues and be asked to fill in the blanks with respect to them. Some of the hardest parts deal with the greetings, so make sure you remember these.

The last section is the Vocabulary section. You will get 28 English words on the left and 28 German words on the right, and be asked to match them accordingly. To study for that, check out the 71 flashcards related to this lesson at FlashcardExchange.com. That is the whole test. Take it!


(edit template) Level One Lessons (discussion)

100%.png 1.00 IntroductionSection 1 ~ Starting Point : 100%.png 1.01 Wie heißt du?100%.png 1.02 Freizeit100%.png 1.03 Essen25%.png Review 1.01Section 2 ~ Berlin, Germany : 100%.png 1.04 Kleidung75%.png 1.05 Volk und Familie50%.png 1.06 Schule25%.png Review 1.02Section 3 ~ Vienna, Austria : 25%.png 1.07 Das Fest25%.png 1.08 Privileg und Verantwortung25%.png 1.09 Wetter25%.png Review 1.03Section 4 ~ Berne, Switzerland : 00%.png 1.10 Zu Hause Essen00%.png 1.11 Filme00%.png 1.12 Das Haus00%.png Review 1.04

(edit template)

German : Print VersionsLessonsGrammarAppendicesAboutQ&APlanning

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