Breakdown of Wir stehen auf dem Bürgersteig und warten auf den Bus.
und
and
dem
the; (masculine or neuter, dative)
wir
we
stehen
to stand
auf
on
der Bus
the bus
warten auf
to wait for
den
the; (masculine, accusative)
der Bürgersteig
the sidewalk
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Questions & Answers about Wir stehen auf dem Bürgersteig und warten auf den Bus.
Why is auf dem Bürgersteig in the dative case rather than accusative?
In German, the preposition auf can govern either dative or accusative. When it describes a static location (“where?”), it takes dative. Here auf dem Bürgersteig tells us where we are standing (static), so we use dative. Since Bürgersteig is masculine (der Bürgersteig), the dative singular article is dem.
Why do we say warten auf den Bus instead of warten den Bus, and why is den Bus accusative?
German uses the prepositional verb warten auf (“to wait for”). You cannot attach the object directly to warten; you need the preposition auf. In this context auf introduces what you are waiting for and therefore governs the accusative case. Since Bus is masculine (der Bus), the accusative singular article is den.
How do I form the dative and accusative singular masculine articles dem and den from der?
Masculine nouns in the nominative singular take der. When you switch to accusative singular, der becomes den. For dative singular, der becomes dem. Thus:
- der Bus → den Bus (Accusative)
- der Bürgersteig → dem Bürgersteig (Dative)
What is the difference between the separable verb aufstehen and the phrase stehen auf as used here?
aufstehen is a separable verb meaning “to get up.” In the present tense it splits: ich stehe auf.
By contrast, stehen auf in stehen auf dem Bürgersteig is not a separable verb but the verb stehen plus the preposition auf indicating “standing on” something. Here auf stays with its object (dem Bürgersteig) and does not detach.
Why is the verb stehen in the present tense instead of a continuous form like in English “we are standing”?
German does not have a separate present-continuous tense. The simple present (stehen) covers both “I stand” and “I am standing.” If you really want to stress the ongoing nature, you can add adverbs like gerade (“just now”) or im Moment, but the verb itself remains in the simple present.
Why are there two verbs, stehen and warten, with only one wir, and how is their order determined?
This is one main clause with a compound predicate joined by und. The subject wir applies to both verbs. In German main clauses each finite verb occupies the second position. The first clause is Wir stehen …, and the second clause is und warten …, so each verb still appears in its clause’s second slot.
What changes if I start the sentence with Auf dem Bürgersteig?
German follows the verb-second (V2) rule. If you front Auf dem Bürgersteig, the finite verb must come next, and the subject follows. The sentence becomes:
Auf dem Bürgersteig stehen wir und warten auf den Bus.
Why is Bürgersteig capitalized?
In German, all nouns are always capitalized. Both Bürgersteig and Bus are nouns, so they each begin with a capital letter.