Breakdown of Ich kaufe mir ein kleines Notizbuch für neue Wörter.
neu
new
ich
I
klein
small
kaufen
to buy
für
for
das Wort
the word
mir
myself
das Notizbuch
the notebook
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Questions & Answers about Ich kaufe mir ein kleines Notizbuch für neue Wörter.
Why is mir included in this sentence? What function does it serve?
In German, when you buy something for someone, you use the dative case to mark the recipient. The construction is jemandem etwas kaufen (“to buy somebody something”). Here, mir is the dative pronoun meaning “to/for myself.” So Ich kaufe mir ein … literally “I buy myself a …”
What case is ein kleines Notizbuch, and why does kleines end with -es?
- ein kleines Notizbuch is the direct object, so it’s in the accusative case.
- Notizbuch is a neuter noun. With the indefinite article ein (which doesn’t show the case ending in the neuter accusative), the adjective must take the strong ending -es. Hence ein kleines Notizbuch.
Why is the preposition für used here, and which case does it require?
- für means “for” in the sense of purpose or benefit.
- für always takes the accusative case.
- In für neue Wörter, neue Wörter is the accusative plural of neues Wort. With no article in the plural, adjectives use the strong declension ending -e, giving neue Wörter.
Why do we use Wörter instead of Worte in this sentence?
- Wörter is the plural used for individual, countable words (e.g. “new words”).
- Worte is more poetic or collective, as in “words of comfort” or “final words.”
Because you’re literally talking about learning individual new words, Wörter is correct.
Could you omit mir and still be correct? If so, what changes?
Yes. You can say
- Ich kaufe ein kleines Notizbuch für neue Wörter.
But without mir it’s unclear for whom you’re buying it. Adding mir clarifies that you’re buying it for yourself.
Why is mir placed before ein kleines Notizbuch in the word order?
German generally orders pronouns before full noun phrases. Since mir is a pronoun (dative) and ein kleines Notizbuch is a noun phrase (accusative), the pronoun comes first.
How would you say this if you were buying it for someone else?
Replace mir with the appropriate dative:
- For a male friend: Ich kaufe ihm ein kleines Notizbuch für neue Wörter.
- For a female friend: Ich kaufe ihr ein kleines Notizbuch für neue Wörter.
- With a name in dative: Ich kaufe meinem Freund ein kleines Notizbuch für neue Wörter.
Can you front the phrase für neue Wörter? How does that affect word order?
Yes. In a main clause, German is a “verb-second” language. If you put für neue Wörter first, the verb kaufe stays in second position:
- Für neue Wörter kaufe ich mir ein kleines Notizbuch.
The rest of the sentence follows in normal order.