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Breakdown of Ich verlasse das Haus früh am Morgen.
dem
the; (masculine or neuter, dative)
das Haus
the house
ich
I
früh
early
der Morgen
the morning
an
at
verlassen
to leave
Questions & Answers about Ich verlasse das Haus früh am Morgen.
Is verlassen a separable verb?
No, verlassen is an inseparable verb. Its prefix ver- always stays attached to the verb stem, so you never split it off in main clauses.
Why is das Haus in the accusative case?
In German, the thing being directly acted upon by the verb is in the accusative case. Here, das Haus is the direct object of verlässt, so it takes the accusative article das.
Why does the verb verlasse appear in the second position of the sentence?
German main clauses follow the V2 rule: the finite verb must be the second element. Here the first element is the subject Ich, and the second is verlasse.
Why is Morgen capitalized in am Morgen?
All nouns in German are capitalized. Morgen (morning) is a noun here, so it always starts with a capital letter.
What does am stand for in am Morgen?
am is a contraction of an dem. When talking about times of day, German often uses an dem plus the noun in dative to mean “in the” or “on the.”
Why is früh not inflected like an adjective here?
In früh am Morgen, früh functions as an adverb modifying the whole time phrase, not as an adjective directly describing Morgen. Adverbs are not inflected in German.
Could I also say Ich verlasse das Haus am frühen Morgen?
Yes. In that version, frühen is an inflected adjective describing Morgen. It slightly shifts the emphasis to “the early part of the morning,” but both versions are correct.
Can the time expression früh am Morgen be placed at the beginning of the sentence?
Yes. German word order for time phrases is flexible. You could say Früh am Morgen verlasse ich das Haus. The verb still stays in the second position.
More from this lesson
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“How do German cases work?”
German has four grammatical cases: nominative (subject), accusative (direct object), dative (indirect object), and genitive (possession). The case determines the form of articles and adjectives. For example, "the dog" is "der Hund" as a subject but "den Hund" as a direct object.
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