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Breakdown of Mein Tablet hilft mir Zeit zu sparen, indem es jede Datei schnell öffnet.
die Zeit
the time
es
it
schnell
quickly
mein
my
öffnen
to open
mir
me
helfen
to help
sparen
to save
jede
every
die Datei
the file
indem
by
das Tablet
the tablet
Questions & Answers about Mein Tablet hilft mir Zeit zu sparen, indem es jede Datei schnell öffnet.
Why is there no article before Zeit?
Because Zeit is used here in an abstract, uncountable sense. In German you say Zeit sparen (“to save time”) without an article.
Why is mir used instead of mich?
The verb helfen always takes a dative object. You say jemandem helfen, never jemanden helfen. Here mir is the dative form of “me.”
Why does the sentence use an infinitive clause Zeit zu sparen instead of a subordinate clause?
German allows verbs like helfen to take a structure: helfen + dative + zu + infinitive. It’s more concise than a full dass-clause.
Do I need a comma before Zeit zu sparen?
No. With verbs such as helfen plus a zu-infinitive, a comma is optional and usually omitted unless it improves clarity or the infinitive has its own subject.
What does indem mean and how is it used?
indem is a subordinating conjunction meaning “by doing (something).” It introduces a clause that explains the method or means and sends the finite verb to the end.
How does indem differ from damit or um…zu?
- indem = “by doing…,” explains how something happens; same subject in both clauses.
- damit = “so that…,” expresses purpose; often a different subject.
- um…zu = also purpose, but in an infinitive construction.
Examples:
• Mein Tablet spart mir Zeit, indem es jede Datei schnell öffnet.
• Ich spare Zeit, um schneller arbeiten zu können.
• Ich spare Zeit, damit ich früher Feierabend habe.
Why is the verb öffnet at the end in the indem-clause?
Because indem is a subordinating conjunction, and in German subordinate clauses the finite verb moves to the very end.
Why is it jede Datei instead of alle Dateien?
- jede Datei (“each file”) emphasizes every single file individually.
- alle Dateien (“all files”) refers to the whole collection at once.
Both are correct, but jede Datei stresses the individual action on each file.
Can I change the word order in the indem-clause, for example to indem es schnell jede Datei öffnet?
Yes. The finite verb öffnet must stay at the end, but you can swap object and adverb for emphasis:
• indem es jede Datei schnell öffnet (neutral)
• indem es schnell jede Datei öffnet (emphasizes speed)
Could I rephrase the main clause using sparen instead of helfen?
Yes. You can say:
Mein Tablet spart mir Zeit, indem es jede Datei schnell öffnet.
Here spart is the main verb, so you drop the zu-infinitive in the first part.
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