Ich stelle den Wecker lauter, damit er früh aufwacht.

Breakdown of Ich stelle den Wecker lauter, damit er früh aufwacht.

ich
I
er
he
früh
early
laut
loud
damit
so that
stellen
to set
der Wecker
the alarm clock
aufwachen
to wake up
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching German grammar and vocabulary.

Start learning German now

Questions & Answers about Ich stelle den Wecker lauter, damit er früh aufwacht.

What is the meaning and grammatical function of lauter in this sentence?
lauter is the comparative form of laut (loud), used here adverbially. In den Wecker lauter stellen it tells you to make the alarm clock louder—to turn up its volume. It is not describing the alarm clock as an adjective but modifying how you “set” it.
Why is den Wecker in the accusative case?
The verb stellen is transitive and takes a direct object. den Wecker (the alarm clock) is the thing you are setting/adjusting, so it goes into the accusative case. Wecker is masculine (der Wecker), so accusative singular becomes den Wecker.
Why does stelle appear in the second position in the main clause?
German main clauses follow the V2 (verb-second) word order: the finite verb (stelle) must occupy the second slot. The first slot here is taken by the subject Ich, so stelle naturally comes next.
Why is damit used to introduce the second clause, and what does it express?
damit is a subordinating conjunction meaning so that or in order that. It introduces a purpose clause expressing intention: you turn up the alarm so that he wakes up early. You choose damit when the subject of the subordinate clause differs from the main clause’s subject.
Why is the verb aufwacht placed at the end of the clause after damit?
Because damit is a subordinating conjunction, it triggers the subordinate (SOV) word order: subject (er) + other elements (früh) + the finite verb (aufwacht) at the very end.
What type of verb is aufwachen, and why is it written as one word here?
aufwachen is a separable-prefix verb (prefix auf + verb wachen). In main clauses you split it (Ich wache um 7 Uhr auf), but in subordinate clauses you keep the prefix attached and place the full verb at the end: damit er früh aufwacht.
Why do we use früh instead of früher here?
früh means “early” (at an early hour). früher is the comparative “earlier” relative to something else. Here you want him to wake up early in the morning, so you use früh. If you meant “wake up earlier than usual,” you’d say damit er früher aufwacht.
Could you use um … zu instead of damit in this sentence?
You can only use um … zu when the subject of both clauses is the same. For example: Ich stelle den Wecker lauter, um früh aufzuwachen (“… so that I wake up early”). But since the subordinate subject is er, not ich, you must use damit.
Is Ich mache den Wecker lauter also correct, and is there any nuance?
Yes, machen works: Ich mache den Wecker lauter means “I make the alarm louder.” However, den Wecker lauter stellen is more idiomatic when talking about increasing an alarm’s volume. machen is more general, while stellen emphasizes adjusting a setting.
Who does er refer to, and could it refer to the alarm clock?
In this sentence er refers to a male person you want to wake up, for example a child or roommate. Although grammatically der Wecker is masculine and could take er, semantically an alarm clock doesn’t “wake up.” That’s why er here must point to a person, not the device.