Breakdown of Im Büro sind die Dokumente noch vorhanden.
sein
to be
noch
still
im
in the; (masculine or neuter, dative)
das Büro
the office
das Dokument
the document
vorhanden
available
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Questions & Answers about Im Büro sind die Dokumente noch vorhanden.
Why is the verb sind placed before the subject?
In German main clauses you must follow the verb-second (V2) rule. When you start with Im Büro (a prepositional phrase), the verb sind comes immediately after in second position. The subject die Dokumente then follows.
Why is Im Büro in the dative case?
The preposition in can take accusative or dative depending on meaning. Here it indicates location (Wo?), so it requires the dative. in + dem Büro contracts to im Büro.
What part of speech is vorhanden? Is it a verb?
vorhanden functions as an adjective (or a past participle used adjectivally) meaning “available” or “present.” It cannot act as a main verb on its own; it pairs with sein to describe a state.
What does noch add, and why is it placed before vorhanden?
noch is an adverb meaning “still.” It modifies vorhanden to indicate the documents are still available. In German, adverbs typically precede the adjective or participle they modify.
Could I say Die Dokumente sind noch im Büro vorhanden instead?
Yes. German allows flexibility in placing prepositional phrases. Both Im Büro sind die Dokumente noch vorhanden and Die Dokumente sind noch im Büro vorhanden are correct; just remember the verb-second rule if you front another element.
What is the difference between vorhanden sein and liegen in this context?
vorhanden sein focuses on existence or availability (“to be present/available”). liegen (“to lie”) describes physical position or location. Saying Die Dokumente liegen noch im Büro stresses their placement; sind noch vorhanden stresses that they are still there or available.
Why is die Dokumente in the nominative plural?
Because die Dokumente is the subject of the verb sind, and subjects in German take the nominative case. It’s plural, so the definite article is die.
Why isn’t there a comma between Dokumente and noch vorhanden?
German doesn’t use a comma between a subject and its predicate. Commas are reserved for subordinate clauses, lists, or other specific constructions, not between the subject die Dokumente and the predicate noch vorhanden.