Breakdown of Ich sehe das Gemälde im Museum.
in
in
dem
the; (masculine or neuter, dative)
ich
I
sehen
to see
das Museum
the museum
das Gemälde
the painting
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Questions & Answers about Ich sehe das Gemälde im Museum.
Why is das Gemälde using das, not der or die?
Gemälde is a neuter noun in German. The singular definite article for neuter nouns in both the nominative and accusative cases is das. der is for masculine singular, die for feminine singular or any plural.
Why is das Gemälde in the accusative case here?
The verb sehen (to see) is transitive, so it takes a direct object. In German, a direct object must be in the accusative case. Since das Gemälde is what’s being seen, it appears in the accusative. For neuter nouns that means the article stays das.
What does im Museum mean, and how is it formed?
im Museum means “in the museum.” It’s a contraction of in dem Museum—the preposition in plus the dative article dem (neuter). German uses the dative case with in when indicating a static location (where something is).
Why not ins Museum?
ins is a contraction of in das (accusative), which shows movement toward a place (wohin?). Here we describe the location inside the museum (wo?), so we use in + dative (dem → im), not in das.
Could I write in dem Museum instead of im Museum?
Yes, in dem Museum is perfectly correct, but in everyday German people almost always contract in dem to im.
Why does sehe (the verb) come second in the sentence?
German main clauses follow the verb-second (V2) rule: the finite verb (sehe) occupies the second position in the sentence. The first position is filled by ich.
Is Gemälde the same as Bild in German?
Not exactly. Gemälde specifically refers to a painting (an artwork created with paint), often on canvas. Bild is more general and can mean any picture or image (photos, drawings, graphics).
How do I say “I see a painting in a museum” with indefinite articles?
You would say: Ich sehe ein Gemälde in einem Museum.
Here ein is the accusative singular neuter indefinite article (“a painting”) and einem is the dative singular neuter indefinite article (“in a museum”).