Breakdown of Im Saal sitzen viele Gäste.
in
in
dem
the; (masculine or neuter, dative)
viele
many
sitzen
to sit
der Gast
the guest
der Saal
the hall
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching German grammar and vocabulary.
Questions & Answers about Im Saal sitzen viele Gäste.
Why is it im Saal instead of in den Saal or in dem Saal?
“im” is simply the contracted form of in + dem. Here in expresses a static location (sitting “in the hall”), so it takes the dative case: dem Saal, contracted to im Saal. By contrast, in den Saal (accusative) would imply movement into the hall (wohin?).
What case is viele Gäste in, and why is there no article?
viele Gäste is in the nominative case because it’s the subject of the sentence (the ones doing the sitting). The word viele (“many”) is a quantifier that replaces an article; when you use viele with a plural noun, no additional article is needed.
Why is it viele and not vielen Gäste?
German adjectives and quantifiers decline according to case, number, and gender. In the nominative plural, viel takes the strong ending -e: viele. The form vielen would be the dative plural ending.
Why does the verb sitzen come before the subject viele Gäste?
German main clauses follow the V2 rule: the finite verb must occupy the second position. Here the first element is the prepositional phrase Im Saal, so sitzen moves to position two, and the subject viele Gäste follows.
Can I start with the subject and then say Viele Gäste sitzen im Saal?
Yes. If you front the subject (Viele Gäste), it becomes the first element, the verb stays in second position (sitzen), and the location phrase follows. Both orders are correct, but fronting changes the emphasis.
How is the plural of Gast formed to become Gäste?
Gast is a masculine noun whose plural is formed by adding -e and applying an umlaut to the stem vowel a → ä, giving Gäste.
How do you pronounce Saal and Gäste?
Saal is pronounced [zaːl] (long “a” as in English “saw”).
Gäste is [ˈɡɛstə], where ä sounds like the “e” in English “bed,” and the final -e is a schwa [ə].
Does sitzen always need a preposition like in or auf?
sitzen itself is an intransitive verb and takes no direct object. To specify where someone is sitting, you pair it with a locative preposition that determines the case (usually in or auf with dative). The verb does not govern case; the preposition does.