Breakdown of Der Schüler geht nach der Grundschule auf ein Gymnasium.
Questions & Answers about Der Schüler geht nach der Grundschule auf ein Gymnasium.
Schüler means a school pupil (usually at primary or secondary school level), not a university student. It’s grammatically masculine, so the nominative singular article is der.
- der Schüler = the (male) pupil
There is also a separate word die Schülerin for a female pupil.
You can often tell singular vs. plural from the article: - der Schüler = the pupil (singular)
- die Schüler = the pupils (plural)
The noun Schüler has the same form in nominative singular and nominative plural. You know it is singular here because of the article der:
- der Schüler = singular (the pupil)
- die Schüler = plural (the pupils)
So in this sentence, Der Schüler clearly refers to one pupil.
Yes. In German, gehen plus a preposition and a school type often means “to attend” that school.
- auf ein Gymnasium gehen = to go to / attend a Gymnasium
You could also say Der Schüler besucht ein Gymnasium (literally “visits” a Gymnasium), which is a bit more formal and explicitly means “attends.”
Using zu (geht zu einem Gymnasium) is unusual here and would sound wrong in standard German for “attends a school.”
No. A German Gymnasium is an academic secondary school that prepares students for university (ending with the Abitur exam). It’s roughly comparable to an academically oriented high school / grammar school / college-prep school, depending on the country.
The English word gym (sports hall / fitness center) is Sporthalle or Fitnessstudio in German, not Gymnasium.
In German, all nouns are capitalized, regardless of whether they are common nouns or proper names.
Here, Schüler, Grundschule, and Gymnasium are all nouns, so they all start with a capital letter. This is a standard spelling rule in German.
Grundschule is primary school / elementary school. It is feminine, so:
- nominative: die Grundschule
- dative singular: der Grundschule
The preposition nach (meaning “after” in a time sense) takes the dative case, so you must say nach der Grundschule (“after primary school”).
Here nach expresses “after” in terms of time: after the phase of primary school is finished. It introduces a time phrase in the dative: nach der Grundschule = after primary school.
You could also say:
- Später geht der Schüler auf ein Gymnasium. (Later, the pupil goes to a Gymnasium.)
- Danach geht der Schüler auf ein Gymnasium. (After that, the pupil goes to a Gymnasium.)
But nach der Grundschule is more precise and grammatically tied to the noun phrase “primary school.”
With institutions like Schule, Universität, Gymnasium, German very often uses auf to mean “go to / attend” the institution:
- auf ein Gymnasium gehen
- auf die Universität gehen
You can hear in ein Gymnasium gehen in some regions, but auf ein Gymnasium gehen is very standard and idiomatic.
zu einem Gymnasium gehen is not used in the meaning “attend a Gymnasium”; it would sound wrong in this context.
The preposition auf can take either accusative (movement towards a place) or dative (location, no movement).
- auf ein Gymnasium gehen = movement to a Gymnasium (accusative)
- auf einem Gymnasium sein = to be at a Gymnasium (dative)
In the sentence, the pupil goes to / moves towards that school level, so auf ein Gymnasium uses the accusative.
Because they are in different cases and genders:
- Grundschule is feminine, and nach requires dative → nach der Grundschule.
- Gymnasium is neuter, and auf with movement takes accusative → auf ein Gymnasium (accusative neuter has the same form as nominative neuter: ein).
So you see a change in the feminine definite article (die → der), but not in the neuter indefinite article (ein → ein).
Yes, that word order is grammatically correct and understandable. German allows some flexibility with adverbial phrases like time and place.
However, the original Nach der Grundschule geht der Schüler auf ein Gymnasium emphasizes the time (“after primary school”) by putting it at the beginning.
Both sentences are correct; the difference is mainly in emphasis and style.
Yes, that is a very natural sentence:
- Der Schüler besucht nach der Grundschule ein Gymnasium.
Here, besucht explicitly means “attends (as a pupil)” and is a bit more formal or bookish than geht auf.
gehen auf ein Gymnasium is more everyday and slightly more general, while besuchen highlights the idea of attending as a regular member of that school.