Breakdown of Die U‑Bahn fährt schnell ins Zentrum.
schnell
quickly
fahren
to travel
in
to
das Zentrum
the center
die U‑Bahn
the subway
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Questions & Answers about Die U‑Bahn fährt schnell ins Zentrum.
What does U‑Bahn stand for, and why is it capitalized?
U‑Bahn is short for Untergrundbahn (“underground railway”). In German, all nouns—including parts of compound nouns—are always capitalized, so you write U‑Bahn with a capital U and B.
Why is the article die used before U‑Bahn?
In German every noun has a gender. U‑Bahn is a feminine noun, so it takes the feminine definite article die (nominative singular).
Why is the verb fährt used here instead of geht or läuft?
fahren is the verb for traveling by vehicle (car, train, subway, etc.). gehen and laufen mean “to go/walk” on foot. Since the subway is a vehicle, you always use fahren (conjugated as fährt for sie/er/es).
Is schnell an adjective or an adverb in this sentence?
Here schnell modifies the action fährt (how it travels), so it functions as an adverb. Adverbs describing manner in German remain in their base form, without adjective endings.
Why is it ins Zentrum and not in das Zentrum, and what case does in take here?
ins is simply the contracted form of in das. When in expresses movement toward something (a change of location), it governs the accusative case. Since Zentrum is neuter, in + das Zentrum becomes ins Zentrum.
What word order rule explains the placement of schnell before ins Zentrum?
German typically orders adverbials as Manner–Place–Time (MPT). Here schnell (manner) comes before ins Zentrum (place). If you added a time expression, it would follow at the end: e.g. Die U‑Bahn fährt schnell ins Zentrum morgen.
Why does the conjugated verb fährt appear in the second position of the sentence?
German main clauses follow the Verb‑Second (V2) rule: the finite verb must occupy the second “slot.” Whatever comes first (here the subject Die U‑Bahn) is position one; the verb fährt is position two; the rest follows.
Could we also say Die U‑Bahn fährt schnell zum Zentrum? Is there a difference?
Yes, zum Zentrum (zu + dem Zentrum, dative) means “to the center” in a general “toward” sense. ins Zentrum (in + accusative) emphasizes movement into the center itself. Both are correct, but ins Zentrum is more precise about entering the center.