Breakdown of Das Brötchen schmeckt mit Butter besonders gut.
mit
with
gut
good
schmecken
to taste
besonders
especially
die Butter
the butter
das Brötchen
the roll
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Questions & Answers about Das Brötchen schmeckt mit Butter besonders gut.
Why is Brötchen neuter?
All German nouns with the diminutive suffix –chen are neuter, regardless of the original noun’s gender. So das Brötchen (“the little bread”) is always neuter.
Why does the sentence use the definite article das Brötchen instead of ein Brötchen?
In German, you often use the definite article for general statements about a category—here, bread rolls in general. Das Brötchen means “the (generic) roll.” If you wanted to talk about any single roll, you could say ein Brötchen.
What case is das Brötchen in, and why?
It’s the subject of the sentence, so it’s in the nominative case. das marks nominative neuter singular.
Shouldn’t schmecken have a dative object like mir (e.g. Mir schmeckt das Brötchen)?
Yes, when you specify who tastes it, you use a dative pronoun: Mir schmeckt das Brötchen (“the roll tastes good to me”). But in general statements about what tastes good in general, German often drops the dative pronoun. It becomes an impersonal construction: Das Brötchen schmeckt ….
Why is it mit Butter and not mit der Butter?
The preposition mit always takes the dative case. Butter here is a mass noun used in a general way, so no article is needed: mit Butter. If you wanted to be specific you could say mit der Butter (dative feminine).
Why does mit require the dative case?
German prepositions each govern a particular case. mit is one of the so-called dative prepositions, so its object must be in the dative.
What’s the difference between schmecken mit Butter and schmecken nach Butter?
schmecken mit Butter means “tastes good with butter” (you add butter to it).
schmecken nach Butter means “tastes of butter” (the flavor resembles butter, even without extra).
Why is besonders gut placed at the end of the sentence? Could it go elsewhere?
German word order often puts the verb, then objects or prepositional phrases, then manner/degree adverbs. Here: schmeckt (verb) mit Butter (prepositional object) besonders gut (degree). You could also say Das Brötchen schmeckt besonders gut mit Butter, which shifts the emphasis slightly onto “especially.”
Can I replace besonders gut with sehr gut or super lecker?
Yes. sehr gut (“very good”) is more neutral. super lecker (“super tasty”) is informal/slang. E.g. Das Brötchen schmeckt mit Butter sehr gut or … super lecker.
Why use schmecken instead of essen or saying ist lecker?
schmecken means “to taste” (i.e. to have a flavor). essen means “to eat” (the action), and ist lecker (“is tasty”) is another way to express taste, but Germans often prefer schmecken for describing how something tastes: Das Brötchen schmeckt gut.