German
Basic German Phrases & Weekdays
            English            Correct German Spelling
 How are you?                  Wie geht es Ihnen?
 I am good.                    Es geht mir gut.
 What is your name?            Wie heißen Sie?
 My name is ...                Ich heiße ...
 Where do you come from?       Woher kommen Sie?
 I am from Pakistan.           Ich komme aus Pakistan.
 Where do you live?            Wo wohnen Sie?
 I live in Islamabad.          Ich wohne in Islamabad.
 What do you do?               Was machen Sie?
 I am learning German.         Ich lerne Deutsch.
 Good morning                  Guten Morgen
 Good day                      Guten Tag
 Good evening                  Guten Abend
 Good night                    Gute Nacht
🗓️ Months of the Year (Monate)
   English       German
 January       Januar
 February      Februar
 March         März
 April         April
 May           Mai
 June          Juni
 July          Juli
 August        August
 September     September
 October       Oktober
 November      November
 December      Dezember
🌦️ Seasons of the Year (Jahreszeiten)
    English       German
 Spring         der Frühling
 Summer         der Sommer
 Autumn/Fall    der Herbst
 Winter         der Winter
   Times of the Day in German (Tageszeiten)
 German           English Translation
Morgen          Morning
Vormittag       Forenoon / Late Morning
Mittag          Noon
Nachmittag      Afternoon
Abends          In the evening
Nacht           Night
Mitternacht     Midnight
   Basic German Words & Phrases Explained
German         English                               Explanation
wie        how              Used in questions: Wie geht's? = How are you?
ist        is               Comes from the verb sein (to be): Das ist gut = That is good
ich        I                Used when you're talking about yourself: Ich bin Ali = I am Ali
du         you              Used with friends or people your age
           (informal)
Sie        you (formal)     Used in polite/formal settings (capital "S" shows it’s formal)
bin        am               First person form of sein: Ich bin müde = I am tired
bist       are (you)        Second person: Du bist nett = You are nice
heißt      is called        From heißen: Wie heißt du? = What’s your name?
gut        good             Ich bin gut = I am good
nicht      not              Used to make things negative: Ich bin nicht müde = I’m not
                            tired
   Example Sentences Using These:
  •     Wie heißt du? → What is your name?
  •     Ich heiße AJ. → My name is AJ.
  •     Wie geht es dir? → How are you? (informal)
  •     Mir geht’s gut. → I’m good.
  •     Das ist mein Buch. → That is my book.
  •         Days of the Week (Wochentage)
  English       German
Monday         Montag
Tuesday        Dienstag
Wednesday      Mittwoch
Thursday       Donnerstag
Friday         Freitag
Saturday       Samstag
Sunday         Sonntag
    Conjugation of Common Verbs
1. machen (to do/make)
  Pronoun machen (to do)
 ich        mache
 du         machst
 er/sie/es macht
 wir        machen
 ihr        macht
 sie/Sie    machen
2. heißen (to be called)
  Pronoun heißen (to be called)
 ich         heiße
 du          heißt
 er/sie/es heißt
 wir         heißen
 ihr         heißt
 sie/Sie     heißen
3. haben (to have)
  Pronoun haben (to have)
 ich         habe
 du          hast
 er/sie/es hat
 wir         haben
 ihr         habt
 sie/Sie     haben
4. sein (to be)
  Pronoun sein (to be)
 ich          bin
 du           bist
 er/sie/es ist
 wir          sind
 ihr          seid
 sie/Sie      sind
Simple Declarative Sentences (Aussagesätze - Statements):
   •   Basic Structure: Subject - Verb - Object (SVO) - often similar to English.
   •   Trick: Think "Who does what to whom/what?"
   •   Example (from your list):
          o Das (Subject - What is it?) ist (Verb - is) deine Frau (Object - your wife).
          o Das (Subject) ist (Verb) meine Schwester (Object - my sister).
2. Questions (Fragen):
   •   W-Questions (W-Fragen - Questions starting with "Wer," "Was," "Wo,"
       "Wann," "Warum," etc.):
           o Structure: W-Word - Verb - Subject - Other Information
           o Trick: The "W-word" always comes first, then the verb "jumps" in front of
             the subject.
           o Example (from your list):
                 ▪ Wer (W-Word - Who) ist (Verb - is) das (Subject - that)?
   •   Yes/No Questions (Ja/Nein-Fragen - Questions that can be answered with "Ja"
       or "Nein"):
           o Structure: Verb - Subject - Other Information
           o Trick: The verb "jumps" to the very beginning of the sentence.
           o Example (from your list):
                 ▪ Bist (Verb - are) du (Subject - you) verheiratet (Other Information -
                    married)?
3. Sentences with Negation (Sätze mit Negation - Sentences with "nicht" - not):
   •   Placement of "nicht": "nicht" usually comes before the part of the sentence it
       negates.
   •   General Guidelines:
          o To negate the verb: "nicht" usually comes after the subject and before the verb
              (or the conjugated part of a multi-part verb).
          o To negate an object or adverbial phrase: "nicht" comes directly before that
              object or phrase.
   •   Example (from your list):
          o Ich (Subject - I) bin (Verb - am) nicht (Negation - not) geschieden
              (Object/Adjective - divorced).
General Tricks and Tips:
   •   Identify the Verb: The verb is the action word and often the key to understanding the
       sentence structure. In simple sentences, the conjugated verb usually comes in the
       second position. In questions, it often comes first (yes/no) or second (w-questions).
   •   Look for Question Words: Words like "Wer," "Was," "Wo," "Wann," "Warum,"
       etc., signal a W-question, and they always come first.
   •   Recognize "nicht": The word "nicht" indicates negation, and its placement is
       important for understanding what is being negated.
   •   Subject-Verb Agreement: The verb ending must agree with the subject (e.g., "ich
       bin," "du bist," "er/sie/es ist"). This can help you identify the subject.
   •   Practice, Practice, Practice: The more you read and listen to German, the more
       you'll develop a feel for the correct word order. Try to build simple sentences
       yourself.
   •   Don't Always Rely on English: German word order can be different from English, so
       try to understand the German rules rather than just translating word-for-word.
Applying the Tricks to Your Examples:
   •   Wer / das / ist: "Wer" is a W-word, so it comes first. "ist" is the verb and comes next.
       "das" is the subject. -> Wer ist das?
   •   das / Frau / ist / deine: "ist" is the verb. "das" is likely the subject. "deine Frau" is the
       object. -> Das ist deine Frau.
   •   das / nein / Schwester / ist / meine: "ist" is the verb. "das" is likely the subject.
       "meine Schwester" is the object. "nein" (no) doesn't fit grammatically here to describe
       the sister. It should be the possessive pronoun "meine" (my). -> Das ist meine
       Schwester.
   •   verheiratet / du / bist: This looks like a yes/no question. The verb "bist" comes first,
       followed by the subject "du," and then the rest. -> Bist du verheiratet?
   •   geschieden / nicht / bin / ich: "bin" is the verb. "ich" is the subject. "nicht" negates
       "geschieden." -> Ich bin nicht geschieden.
Letter Combinations and Examples:
   •   sp (ʃp):
           o      Sprache - Language
           o      Sport - Sport
           o      spielen - to play
           o      sprechen - to speak
   •   st (ʃt):
           o      Student - Student
           o      Stuhl - chair
           o      Straße - street
           o      Stadt - city
   •   ie (iː):
           o      spielen - to play   (repeated from the 'sp' section)
           o      vier - four
           o      Papier - paper
           o      viel - a lot
   •   ei (aɪ):
           o      Speisekarte - menu card
           o      schreiben - writing (to write)
           o      Wein - wine
           o   (A word written in what appears to be Arabic script, possibly the Urdu
               equivalent of "wine")
   •   ch (ç, x): (The pronunciation varies depending on the preceding vowel)
           o Buchstaben - letters (of the alphabet)
           o Nacht - night
           o Sprache - language (repeated from the 'sp' section)
           o noch - still
• ch (after any other alphabet) (x):
   •     sprechen  - to speak (repeated from the first image, but now with a different
         pronunciation indicated for 'ch')
   •     Schwester - sister
   •     Bücher - books
   •     Buch - book
   •     (A word written in what appears to be Arabic script, possibly the Urdu equivalent of
         "book")
   •     ich - I
   •     dich - you (accusative/dative singular)
• sch (ʃ):
   •     Schule - school
   •     Tisch - table
   •     schön - beautiful
   •     schon - already
• tsch (tʃ):
   •     Deutschland - Germany
   •     Tschüss - bye bye
• eu (ɔʏ):
   •     Deutsch - German
   •     Leute - people
   •     heute - today
   •     Euro - Euro
• au (aʊ):
   •     Frau - woman,   girl, miss, Mrs.
   •     traurig - sad
Okay, I see the table of personal pronouns and possessive pronouns/articles in German.
Here's a breakdown of the possessive articles in the nominative case, based on the personal
pronoun and the gender of the noun they modify:
Possessive Articles (Nominative Case)
       Personal       Masculine        Feminine      Neuter       Plural         English
       Pronoun        Noun (der)       Noun (die)    Noun          Noun         Equivalent
                                                      (das)        (die)
 ich (I)             mein             meine         mein         meine        my
 du (you,           dein          deine         dein        deine        your (informal)
 informal)
 er (he)            sein          seine         sein        seine        his
 sie (she)          ihr           ihre          ihr         ihre         her
 es (it)            sein          seine         sein        seine        its
 wir (we)           unser         unsere        unser       unsere       our
 ihr (you, plural   euer          eure          euer        eure         your (plural
 informal)                                                               informal)
 Sie/sie (you,      Ihr/ihr       Ihre/ihre     Ihr/ihr     Ihre/ihre    Your
 formal/they)                                                            (formal)/their
Explanation of the Table:
   •   Personal Pronoun: This column shows the German personal pronouns (I, you, he,
       she, it, we, you pl., they/you formal).
   •   Masculine Noun (der): This column shows the form of the possessive article when it
       precedes a masculine noun in the nominative case.
   •   Feminine Noun (die): This column shows the form of the possessive article when it
       precedes a feminine noun in the nominative case.
   •   Neuter Noun (das): This column shows the form of the possessive article when it
       precedes a neuter noun in the nominative case.
   •   Plural Noun (die): This column shows the form of the possessive article when it
       precedes a plural noun in the nominative case.