Diese Grundlage ist so wichtig, dass drei Beispiele genügen.

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Questions & Answers about Diese Grundlage ist so wichtig, dass drei Beispiele genügen.

What does the so … dass construction express, and how is it formed?
It expresses degree + result. Pattern: so + adjective/adverb, dass + clause. Example here: so wichtig, dass …. The comma is mandatory, and the verb in the dass-clause goes to the end.
Why dass and not das?
  • dass = conjunction “that” introducing a subordinate clause.
  • das = article/demonstrative/relative (“the/this/that/which”). Quick test: If you can replace it with dieses/jenes/welches, use das; otherwise it’s dass. Note: older spelling uses daß for dass.
Why is there a comma before dass?
German requires a comma before subordinate clauses introduced by conjunctions like dass. So: …, dass … is obligatory.
Why is the verb at the end in dass drei Beispiele genügen?
Because dass introduces a subordinate clause, and German sends the finite verb to the clause-final position: …, dass [Subject/other parts] [Verb-final].
Why genügen (plural) and not genügt (singular)?
The subject of the subordinate clause is drei Beispiele (plural), so the verb agrees: genügen. With a singular subject, you’d have ein Beispiel genügt.
Is drei Beispiele the subject? Why no article?
Yes, it’s the subject of the dass-clause. Indefinite plural nouns usually appear without an article: drei Beispiele. If you mean specific ones, use die drei Beispiele.
Can I use sodass/so dass here?

Not in combination with the correlative so … dass. Use either:

  • so + Adj., dass … (as in the sentence), or
  • …, sodass/so dass … without a preceding so before the adjective. For example: Es ist so kalt, dass … vs. Es war kalt, sodass …. Don’t write so wichtig, sodass ….
Should it be dass or damit for “so that”?
  • dass expresses a result/consequence (as here).
  • damit expresses purpose/intention (in order that). Example: …, damit wir Zeit sparen. Using damit here would be wrong.
What does genügen mean, and how does it differ from reichen/ausreichen and genug?
  • genügen = “to suffice/be enough” (slightly formal). Often with a dative: Das genügt mir.
  • reichen = “to be enough” (neutral/colloquial): Drei Beispiele reichen.
  • ausreichen = “to be sufficient” (neutral/official-ish): Drei Beispiele reichen aus.
  • genug = adverb/adjective “enough,” not a verb: Drei Beispiele sind genug. You can say genügen für … in some contexts (Das genügt für heute), but (aus)reichen (für …) is more common with für.
Can I say dass es drei Beispiele genügen?
No. The expletive es is used in main-clause word order to fill the first position (e.g., Es genügen drei Beispiele). Inside a dass-clause, drop the expletive: …, dass drei Beispiele genügen.
What are the subjects and verbs in each clause?
  • Main clause: Subject = Diese Grundlage; Verb = ist.
  • Subordinate clause: Subject = drei Beispiele; Verb = genügen.
What gender/case is Grundlage, and why Diese (not Dieser)?
Grundlage is feminine. Here it’s nominative singular as the subject, so the demonstrative determiner is diese: Diese Grundlage …. Dieser Grundlage would be dative/genitive feminine (or nominative masculine for a different noun), so it wouldn’t fit here.
Where would I put nur if I want to say “only three examples”?
Place it right before the numeral: …, dass nur drei Beispiele genügen.
Why are Grundlage and Beispiele capitalized?
All nouns are capitalized in German. Diese is capitalized here simply because it begins the sentence.