Breakdown of Ich gebe heute nur drei Euro für Brot aus.
das Brot
the bread
ich
I
heute
today
für
for
nur
only
drei
three
der Euro
the euro
ausgeben
to spend
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Questions & Answers about Ich gebe heute nur drei Euro für Brot aus.
What does the separable verb ausgeben mean and why is aus at the end of the sentence?
Ausgeben means “to spend” (money, resources). In a main clause German splits (separates) separable verbs: the prefix (aus) detaches from the stem (geben) and moves to the very end, while the finite verb part (gebe) sits in second position.
Why is the time adverb heute placed where it is?
German follows the “verb-second” (V2) rule. After the subject (ich) the conjugated verb (gebe) must come second, and time adverbs like heute typically follow immediately. Hence:
- Ich (subject)
- gebe (verb)
- heute (time)
What role does nur play and why is it placed before drei Euro?
Nur is a limiting adverb meaning “only.” It sits directly in front of the element it limits—in this case drei Euro—to show you spend nothing more than three euros today.
Why is für used here, and which case does it require?
To express “to spend on,” German uses ausgeben für. The preposition für always takes the accusative case, so Brot is in accusative (though spelled like the nominative).
Why is Brot singular and without an article?
Brot is a mass (uncountable) noun when you talk about bread in general. In German, uncountable nouns often appear without an article if you mean “some bread” in a general sense.
Why isn’t Euro pluralized (e.g., Euros)?
When you state amounts, the noun of currency usually stays unchanged in German. So you say drei Euro, not drei Euros, to mean “three euros.”
Can I move heute to the beginning of the sentence?
Yes. Fronting a time expression is common for emphasis. You’d say:
Heute gebe ich nur drei Euro für Brot aus.
This still obeys V2: gebe remains the second element, ich follows in third position.
What happens if I place nur in another position?
The position of nur changes what it limits. For example:
• Ich gebe nur heute drei Euro für Brot aus. (“I spend three euros on bread only today.”)
• Ich gebe heute drei Euro nur für Brot aus. (“Today I spend three euros solely on bread, nothing else.”)
Each placement shifts the focus of “only.”