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1.8: The Indefinite Article ein

  • Page ID
    89039
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    The German word for “a,” “an,” or “one” is ein, and like the definite article, the various endings it takes can help you identify case, gender, and number of the following noun phrase. Thus, taking the examples Tisch, Feder and Bett, we have in the nominative and accusative cases:

    MASCULINE FEMININE NEUTER PLURAL
    NOMINATIVE ein Tisch eine Feder ein Bett keine Tische
    ACCUSATIVE einen Tisch eine Feder ein Bett keine Federn

    There is no plural of ein, obviously, but to use kein- (“no”, “not a”) shows us that the -e ending on indefinite articles can indicate either a plural or feminine status. For example: keine Betten (no beds).

    Examples of singular kein-:

    Ich habe keine Ahnung.
    I have no idea.
    Kein Mensch weiß warum.
    Nobody knows why.


    This page titled 1.8: The Indefinite Article ein is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Howard Martin revised by Alan Ng.

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