Breakdown of Der Bahnhof ist größer als die Haltestelle, aber die U‑Bahn ist oft schneller.
Questions & Answers about Der Bahnhof ist größer als die Haltestelle, aber die U‑Bahn ist oft schneller.
• Bahnhof is masculine – der Bahnhof.
• Haltestelle is feminine – die Haltestelle.
• U‑Bahn is also feminine – die U‑Bahn.
In German every noun has a fixed gender, and you must learn each noun together with its article.
To form the comparative of groß, you:
- Add -er → groß
- -er = großer
- Umlaut the vowel o → großer → größer
This is a regular pattern for one‑syllable adjectives (and many two‑syllable ones) with an a, o or u.
Standard German comparative constructions pair größer with als (not wie).
Incorrect: größer wie die Haltestelle
Correct: größer als die Haltestelle
(Some dialects use wie, but in written and formal German you should use als.)
No. When you compare two nouns, each keeps its article:
Der Bahnhof ist größer als die Haltestelle.
Omitting the article would sound ungrammatical. (With pronouns, of course, you replace the article by the appropriate pronoun.)
aber is a coordinating conjunction meaning “but.”
• It connects two main clauses without changing their internal verb–subject order.
• After aber, you still follow the pattern Conjunction + Subject + Verb:
aber die U‑Bahn ist oft schneller
If you used a subordinating conjunction (like weil), it would send the verb to the end.
In German main clauses, frequency adverbs like oft typically occupy the “Mittelfeld,” often immediately before the predicate adjective or verb:
die U‑Bahn ist oft schneller
If you moved oft elsewhere (e.g. after schneller), it would sound awkward or unnatural.
• U‑Bahn is short for Untergrundbahn (“underground railway”).
• Abbreviations of this kind in German frequently use a hyphen after a single letter.
• All German nouns (including abbreviations that function as nouns) are capitalized.