Breakdown of Zu Hause stelle ich den Einkaufskorb neben den Herd und packe das Gemüse aus.
und
and
dem
the; (masculine or neuter, dative)
das Haus
the house
ich
I
zu
to
das Gemüse
the vegetable
neben
next to
der Herd
the stove
der Einkaufskorb
the shopping basket
stellen
to set
auspacken
to unpack
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Questions & Answers about Zu Hause stelle ich den Einkaufskorb neben den Herd und packe das Gemüse aus.
What does Zu Hause mean and why is it at the beginning of the sentence?
Zu Hause is a fixed adverbial phrase meaning at home. In German, you can place a time/manner/place phrase at the start of a main clause for emphasis or context. Here, it tells us where the action happens before we introduce the subject and verb.
Why is there no article before Hause?
In the idiom zu Hause, Hause appears without an article. It functions like the English word “home” in “I’m at home,” where you also drop the article.
Why is it den Einkaufskorb and not dem Einkaufskorb?
Den Einkaufskorb is in the accusative case because it is the direct object of the verb stelle (to place/put). Der Einkaufskorb (masculine) takes den in the accusative.
Why is it neben den Herd and not neben dem Herd?
Neben is a Wechselpräposition (two-way preposition). With verbs of movement or change of location (here stelle), German uses the accusative case to show direction. So you get neben den Herd. If there were no movement (just stating location), you’d use dative: neben dem Herd.
How do we know the basket is being moved rather than already standing there?
The verb stellen itself implies motion or a change of position—you are actively putting the basket next to the stove. That triggers the accusative case with neben.
Why is the separable verb auspacken split into packe … aus?
In a main-clause Verb-Second (V2) structure, separable-prefix verbs split: the finite part packe goes to the second position, and the prefix aus moves to the end of the clause. Hence ich packe das Gemüse aus.
What’s the difference between stellen and legen?
Stellen means to place something upright (vertical), while legen means to lay something down (horizontal). Since a shopping basket stands upright, you “stelle” it.
Could you reorder the objects and the prepositional phrase?
Yes. German word order is relatively flexible. For instance:
• Zu Hause stelle ich den Einkaufskorb neben den Herd (time/place – verb – subject – object – prepositional phrase)
• Ich stelle zu Hause den Einkaufskorb neben den Herd (subject – verb – time/place – object – prepositional phrase)
• Zu Hause stelle ich neben den Herd den Einkaufskorb (placing the PP before the object for slight emphasis)
All are grammatically correct; you just need to keep the verb in second position.