Breakdown of Dankbar bin ich dir, dass du diese nützliche Quelle geteilt hast.
sein
to be
ich
I
du
you
haben
to have
dass
that
dir
you
teilen
to share
dankbar
grateful
nützlich
useful
die Quelle
the source
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Questions & Answers about Dankbar bin ich dir, dass du diese nützliche Quelle geteilt hast.
Why does the sentence start with Dankbar instead of Ich bin dir dankbar?
German allows you to front (topicalize) almost any element for emphasis. When you put Dankbar in first position, it highlights your gratitude. The finite verb (bin) must still come second (V2 rule), so ich follows as subject in third position.
Why is dir in the dative case?
The adjective dankbar governs the dative: “jemandem dankbar sein” means “to be grateful to someone.” The person you are grateful to is always in dative, hence dir (dative of du).
What’s the role of dass in this sentence, and why not use weil?
dass introduces a content (object) clause: “that you shared this useful source.” It conveys the fact you’re grateful for. weil would introduce a causal clause (“because you shared…”), slightly shifting the nuance from stating a fact to giving a reason.
Why is there a comma before dass?
In German, subordinate clauses introduced by conjunctions like dass must be separated from the main clause by a comma. This comma marks the boundary between the two clauses.
Why do geteilt and hast appear at the end of the subordinate clause?
Subordinate clauses push all finite verbs to the end. In the Perfekt tense you have two verb parts: the past participle (geteilt) and the auxiliary (hast). The past participle comes first, then the auxiliary last: geteilt hast.
Why is the Perfekt (geteilt hast) used here instead of simple past (teiltest)?
In spoken and informal written German, Perfekt is the default for past events. Präteritum (simple past) tends to stay in written narratives or with a few common verbs. For teilen, Perfekt sounds most natural.
Why is diese nützliche Quelle in the accusative case, and how do you know Quelle is feminine?
The verb geteilt is transitive; it takes a direct object, which is accusative. Quelle is a feminine noun (die Quelle). In accusative singular the feminine article stays die, so with the demonstrative diese you get diese nützliche Quelle.
Why does the adjective nützliche end in -e instead of -en or -er?
After a definite article or demonstrative pronoun (here diese) German uses weak adjective endings. For feminine singular accusative the weak ending is -e, so nützliche.
What’s the difference between dass (double “s”) and das (single “s”)?
dass with ss is the conjunction introducing subordinate clauses. das with a single s is either the definite article “the” or a relative pronoun (“that/which”). Mixing them up is a very common mistake.
Could you say Ich bin dir dankbar, dass du diese nützliche Quelle geteilt hast instead?
Absolutely. Ich bin dir dankbar… is the neutral word order (subject first). Fronting Dankbar is simply a stylistic choice to give your gratitude extra prominence. Both versions are correct and mean the same thing.