Breakdown of Die untere Taste macht die Lautstärke leiser.
Questions & Answers about Die untere Taste macht die Lautstärke leiser.
untere means “lower” (the lower one of at least two items). If you want to say “lowest/bottommost,” use the superlative unterste.
- With two buttons stacked vertically: die untere Taste = the lower (i.e., bottom) button.
- With three or more: use die unterste Taste for the very bottom one.
Opposite: die obere Taste (“the upper button”); superlative: die oberste Taste (“the topmost button”).
Because Taste is feminine and the subject (nominative), and with the definite article die, the adjective takes the ending -e: die untere Taste.
A few quick contrasts:
- Nominative feminine: die untere Taste
- Accusative feminine: die untere Taste
- Dative feminine: der unteren Taste
- Nominative masculine: der untere Knopf
- Accusative masculine: den unteren Knopf
- Dative masculine: dem unteren Knopf
leiser is the comparative form of the adjective leise (“quiet”). Here it’s a predicative complement (an object complement) after machen:
Pattern: Subject + machen + object + predicative adjective → Die untere Taste macht die Lautstärke leiser.
In a subordinate clause, the verb goes to the end: …, dass die untere Taste die Lautstärke leiser macht.
No. leiserer is an attributive form (used before a noun): ein leiserer Ton (“a quieter tone”).
After machen/werden/sein (predicative use), you use the base comparative without an extra ending: macht … leiser, wird leiser, ist leiser.
Yes, very idiomatic. Common alternatives:
- Die untere Taste verringert/senkt/reduziert die Lautstärke.
- With a person as the subject: Stell die Lautstärke leiser.
- With a knob/slider: Dreh/Regle die Lautstärke runter.
Yes, but that describes a change of state without saying who or what causes it.
- Cause expressed (your original): Die untere Taste macht die Lautstärke leiser.
- No explicit cause: Die Lautstärke wird leiser.
- Taste: a push-button or key (remote control, keyboard, elevator button).
- Knopf: can be a push-button or a small round control; sometimes a rotary knob (context-dependent).
- Schalter: a switch (toggle/rocker that stays on/off).
- Regler: a control you adjust continuously (slider, dial, fader).
Use them when the control is something you adjust (knob/slider) or when a person is the agent:
- Person as subject: Stell die Lautstärke leiser. / Dreh die Lautstärke runter.
- With a button as subject, prefer: Die (untere) Taste macht/verringert/senkt … rather than stellt … leiser.
It’s understandable but less natural with Taste as the subject. Better:
- Die untere Taste macht/verringert/senkt die Lautstärke.
With a person as subject, leiser stellen is very common: Ich stelle die Lautstärke leiser.
No, that’s not idiomatic. Use leiser with machen, or use runterdrehen with a knob/slider:
- macht die Lautstärke leiser
- dreht die Lautstärke runter
Both can refer to the lower/bottom button.
- die untere Taste: neutral, standard attributive adjective.
- die Taste unten: uses the adverb unten; can feel a bit more colloquial or spatially descriptive (“the button down below”). In many contexts they’re interchangeable.
- The default, idiomatic choice is leiser for sound/volume.
- geringere/niedrigere Lautstärke can appear in technical or descriptive contexts before a noun, but macht die Lautstärke geringer/niedriger is uncommon in everyday speech.
- kleiner for volume is nonstandard; you’d say leiser stellen, not typically kleiner stellen (though some speakers use it).
- ruhiger means “calmer” and is not used for volume.
- Die obere Taste macht die Lautstärke lauter.
You can also say: Die obere Taste erhöht/steigert die Lautstärke.
- Die untere Taste: nominative feminine singular (subject).
- macht: 3rd person singular present of machen.
- die Lautstärke: accusative feminine singular (direct object).
- leiser: comparative adjective used predicatively (object complement).