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Breakdown of Der Hund läuft auf dem Dach.
dem
the; (masculine or neuter, dative)
der Hund
the dog
auf
on
laufen
to run
das Dach
the roof
Questions & Answers about Der Hund läuft auf dem Dach.
What is the grammatical structure of the sentence "Der Hund läuft auf dem Dach"?
The sentence follows the typical German word order for simple declarative statements. It consists of the subject ("Der Hund"), the conjugated verb ("läuft"), and a prepositional phrase indicating location ("auf dem Dach"). The structure is very similar to English’s Subject–Verb–Modifier order.
Why is "dem Dach" in the dative case?
The preposition auf is a two-way preposition in German, meaning it can take either the dative or accusative case. In this sentence, it indicates a static location—answering the question where?—so the dative case is used. If the sentence described movement toward the roof, the accusative case would be required instead.
Why is the article der used with "Hund"?
The noun Hund (dog) is masculine, and since it is the subject of the sentence, it appears in the nominative case. In German, the masculine nominative definite article is der. Thus, "Der Hund" means "the dog" with correct gender and case agreement.
How does the verb form läuft relate to its infinitive laufen?
Läuft is the third-person singular present tense form of laufen. In this sentence, it is correctly conjugated to agree with the singular subject Der Hund. The verb laufen can mean "to run" or "to walk," and here it conveys that the dog is running.
How can I tell when to use the dative versus the accusative with prepositions like auf?
In German, many prepositions (including auf) change their case based on context. They take the dative case when indicating a static location (answering where?) and the accusative case when indicating movement toward a destination (answering where to?). Because this sentence describes the dog's location on the roof, the dative case is used ("dem Dach").
What would change in the sentence if it meant that the dog was running onto the roof instead of already being on it?
If the intent were to express movement toward the roof, the preposition auf would then require the accusative case instead of the dative. The phrase "auf dem Dach" would become "auf das Dach," signaling that the dog is moving onto the roof rather than simply being on it.
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“How do German cases work?”
German has four grammatical cases: nominative (subject), accusative (direct object), dative (indirect object), and genitive (possession). The case determines the form of articles and adjectives. For example, "the dog" is "der Hund" as a subject but "den Hund" as a direct object.
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