Breakdown of Die Kinder spielen barfuß auf dem Rasen.
Questions & Answers about Die Kinder spielen barfuß auf dem Rasen.
Why is it die Kinder and not das Kinder or den Kinder?
Because Kinder is the plural of das Kind. In the nominative plural, the definite article is always die for all genders.
- Singular: das Kind
- Plural (nominative/accusative): die Kinder You’ll see den Kindern in the dative plural (for example: Ich helfe den Kindern.).
Why can spielen mean “are playing” even though German has no progressive tense?
What part of speech is barfuß? Does it change form?
barfuß is typically an adverb or a predicative adjective. It does not decline: Er läuft barfuß. / Ich bin barfuß. If you need an attributive adjective before a noun, use barfüßig: barfüßige Kinder (“barefoot children”). You can also paraphrase with mit nackten Füßen.
Why is it auf dem Rasen (dative) and not auf den Rasen (accusative)?
auf is a two-way preposition.
- Use dative for location (where?): auf dem Rasen = on the lawn (static location).
- Use accusative for direction (where to?): auf den Rasen = onto the lawn (movement). Example: Die Kinder laufen auf den Rasen (they run onto the lawn) vs. Die Kinder spielen auf dem Rasen (they play on the lawn).
Is the word order barfuß auf dem Rasen fixed? Can I say auf dem Rasen barfuß?
What gender is Rasen, and why dem?
Rasen (lawn) is masculine: der Rasen. In the dative singular, the article is dem, so auf dem Rasen. Full singular paradigm:
- Nominative: der Rasen
- Accusative: den Rasen
- Dative: dem Rasen
- Genitive: des Rasens
What’s the difference between Rasen, Gras, and Wiese?
- Rasen: a maintained lawn (mowed, in a yard/park/sports field).
- Gras: grass (the plant/cover in general; often uncountable).
- Wiese: a meadow or field, typically more natural and less manicured than a lawn.
Why use auf and not in or an here?
- auf indicates being on a surface: auf dem Rasen (on the lawn).
- in would suggest being inside/within something: im Gras (in the grass) is possible if you picture the grass surrounding the feet.
- an usually indicates “at/by/next to” a vertical surface or an edge: am Rasen would mean “at the lawn (edge),” not on it.
Do I have to write barfuß with ß? Is barfuss wrong?
How do you pronounce the sentence?
Rough guide (IPA in slashes):
- Die Kinder: /diː ˈkɪndɐ/
- spielen: /ˈʃpiːlən/ (initial sp sounds like “shp”)
- barfuß: /ˈbaʁfuːs/ (long “u,” ß = unvoiced s)
- auf dem: /aʊ̯f deːm/
- Rasen: /ˈraːzən/ (the “s” between vowels is voiced “z”) Put together smoothly: /diː ˈkɪndɐ ˈʃpiːlən ˈbaʁfuːs aʊ̯f deːm ˈraːzən/.
Can auf dem be contracted?
Can I drop the article and say Kinder spielen barfuß auf dem Rasen?
Where does nicht go if I want to negate something?
Place nicht before the element you are negating:
- Negate the manner: Die Kinder spielen nicht barfuß auf dem Rasen. (They are playing on the lawn, but not barefoot.)
- Negate the place: Die Kinder spielen barfuß nicht auf dem Rasen, sondern auf dem Spielplatz.
- Negate the whole predicate (neutral): Die Kinder spielen nicht barfuß auf dem Rasen. (context decides what is contrasted)
Does Kinder change in the dative plural?
Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor
Start learning GermanMaster German — from Die Kinder spielen barfuß auf dem Rasen to fluency
All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods, no signup needed.
- ✓Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
- ✓Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
- ✓Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
- ✓ AI tutor to answer your grammar questions