Kürzlich hat meine Freundin einen preiswerten Router gekauft.

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Questions & Answers about Kürzlich hat meine Freundin einen preiswerten Router gekauft.

Why is the verb hat in second position and the subject comes after it?

German main clauses are verb-second (V2). Whatever you put in first position (here: the time adverb Kürzlich) takes the first “slot,” so the finite verb (hat) must be in the second slot, and the subject (meine Freundin) follows it. Both are correct:

  • Kürzlich hat meine Freundin …
  • Meine Freundin hat kürzlich … But not: Kürzlich meine Freundin hat … (ungrammatical).
Why is it hat gekauft and not ist gekauft?
In the perfect tense, most transitive verbs (those that take a direct object), including kaufen, use haben as the auxiliary: hat gekauft. The auxiliary sein is for intransitives of motion or change of state (e.g., ist gegangen, ist geworden) and a few exceptions.
Why use the present perfect (hat gekauft) instead of simple past (kaufte)?
In contemporary spoken German, the present perfect is the normal past tense for most verbs. Simple past (kaufte) is more typical in formal writing or narrative and is common in auxiliaries/modals (e.g., war, konnte). So in everyday speech: hat gekauft is preferred.
Why einen preiswerten Router and not ein preiswerter Router?

Because Router is the direct object of kaufen and must be in the accusative case. Masculine singular accusative takes:

  • Article: einen
  • Adjective (after an ein-word): -enpreiswerten So: einen preiswerten Router. By contrast, as a subject (nominative), it would be ein preiswerter Router.
How do I know the gender of Router, and what are its forms?

Router is masculine: der Router. Key forms:

  • Nominative: der Router / ein Router
  • Accusative: den Router / einen Router
  • Dative: dem Router / einem Router
  • Genitive: des Routers / eines Routers Plural: die Router (no change in the noun).
Why is gekauft at the end?
With a compound tense, German forms a “sentence bracket”: the finite verb (hat) sits in second position, and the non-finite part (gekauft) goes to the end of the clause. In a subordinate clause, the finite verb also goes to the end: …, weil meine Freundin kürzlich einen preiswerten Router gekauft hat.
Where can I put kürzlich in the sentence?

Common options:

  • Fronted for emphasis: Kürzlich hat meine Freundin …
  • Midfield after the subject/verb: Meine Freundin hat kürzlich … Placing it at the very end (… gekauft kürzlich) is unusual; time adverbs usually come earlier in the clause.
Does meine Freundin mean “my girlfriend” or “my (female) friend”?
Both are possible. In everyday usage, meine Freundin often implies “my girlfriend.” To clearly mean a non-romantic friend, prefer eine Freundin von mir. Similarly, mein Freund often implies “my boyfriend” unless clarified (ein Freund von mir).
Do I need an article before Router?
Yes. Singular countable nouns in German normally require a determiner. So you need something like ein/einen/diesen/den Router. Bare Router without an article is not idiomatic in the singular.
What’s the nuance of preiswert vs billig vs günstig?
  • preiswert / günstig: positive/neutral—good value for the price.
  • billig: can imply “cheap” in a negative sense (poor quality or tacky). So preiswert suggests “inexpensive but decent,” not “shoddy.”
How do you pronounce the key words?
  • Kürzlich: roughly “KYUR-ts-lich”; the ü is like French “u”; final ch is the soft “ich” sound.
  • gekauft: roughly “guh-KOWFT” (like English “cow” + “ft”).
  • Router: both “ROO-ter” (like English “rooter”) and “ROW-ter” are heard in German; “ROO-ter” is often considered standard in Germany.
Could it be dative (einem preiswerten Router) instead?
Not here. kaufen takes a direct object in the accusative (einen preiswerten Router). You’d use dative for an indirect object, e.g., Sie hat ihrem Bruder (DAT) einen Router (ACC) gekauft.
How would I make a question from this sentence?
  • Yes–no: Hat meine Freundin kürzlich einen preiswerten Router gekauft?
  • Wh-question (object): Was hat meine Freundin kürzlich gekauft?
  • Wh-question (time): Wann hat deine Freundin den Router gekauft?
  • Subject question: Wer hat kürzlich einen preiswerten Router gekauft?
Why is there no comma after Kürzlich?
Because Kürzlich is just an adverb placed in the first position. German doesn’t insert a comma after a single fronted adverb. Commas separate clauses or certain lists, not a lone sentence-initial adverb.
Can I say neulich or vor kurzem instead of kürzlich?

Yes, all mean “recently,” with slight nuances:

  • kürzlich: neutral to slightly formal; common in writing.
  • neulich: colloquial, used often in speech (“the other day” vibe).
  • vor kurzem: neutral phrase; works well in both speech and writing.