Breakdown of Der Hund läuft durch das Gras im Garten.
Questions & Answers about Der Hund läuft durch das Gras im Garten.
Der Hund is the subject of the sentence – the dog is the one doing the action (running).
In German, subjects take the nominative case.
- Masculine nominative singular article: der
- Masculine accusative singular article: den
Since Hund is the subject, it must be der Hund (nominative), not den Hund (accusative).
Laufen is the infinitive (to run, to walk/jog).
In German, the verb must be conjugated to match the subject.
For ich / du / er, sie, es / wir / ihr / sie:
- ich laufe
- du läufst
- er/sie/es läuft
- wir laufen
- ihr lauft
- sie/Sie laufen
The subject is der Hund = er (he/it), so you need er läuft.
That is why the sentence has läuft.
Laufen is a strong (irregular) verb.
In the present tense, many strong verbs change their vowel in the stem for du and er/sie/es.
With laufen:
- infinitive: laufen
- stem: lauf-
- du-form: du läufst
- er/sie/es-form: er läuft
So the a changes to äu in du and er/sie/es forms. You simply have to learn these stem changes as part of the verb.
The preposition durch always takes the accusative case in German.
Gras is neuter:
- nominative/accusative neuter singular: das Gras
- dative neuter singular: dem Gras
Because durch requires the accusative, you must say durch das Gras, not durch dem Gras.
Unfortunately, in German the grammatical gender of many nouns is not predictable from their meaning.
Gras happens to be neuter, so its article in the singular (nominative and accusative) is das.
You generally have to learn new nouns together with their article, for example:
- das Gras (grass)
- der Hund (dog)
- der Garten (garden)
Over time, you will develop a feel for common patterns, but memorizing article + noun is essential.
Im is a contraction of in dem:
- in
- dem → im
In can take either dative (location, where something is) or accusative (direction, where something is going).
- Dative (location): im Garten = in dem Garten (in the garden)
- Accusative (direction): in den Garten (into the garden)
In this sentence, the dog is already in the garden running through the grass, so it describes a location, not a movement into the garden.
Therefore, dative is used: im Garten.
The sentence has three important noun phrases, each in a different case:
- Der Hund – nominative (subject; who/what is doing the action?)
- durch das Gras – accusative (object of durch, which always takes accusative)
- im Garten (in dem Garten) – dative (location after in, because it answers where? not where to?)
So we have:
Nominative: der Hund
Accusative: das Gras
Dative: dem Garten (hidden inside im)
In German, all nouns are capitalized, no matter where they appear in the sentence.
So you write:
- der Hund
- das Gras
- der Garten
This is a standard rule in German spelling and independent of emphasis or sentence position.
Yes, you can say Der Hund rennt durch das Gras im Garten, and it is grammatically correct.
The nuance:
- laufen is quite general: to walk, run, jog, go on foot.
- rennen usually implies running fast / sprinting.
So rennt makes the dog’s movement sound faster and more energetic than läuft, which is more neutral.
In a main clause in German, the conjugated verb must be in the second position (the V2 rule).
Count chunks, not individual words:
- Der Hund (first position: subject)
- läuft (second position: verb)
- durch das Gras im Garten (rest of the sentence)
No matter what comes first—subject, time, place, etc.—the main verb must stay in second position in a normal statement.
Yes, you can say:
Im Garten läuft der Hund durch das Gras.
This is still correct. The word order pattern changes, but the conjugated verb stays in second position:
- Im Garten (first position: place)
- läuft (second position: verb)
- der Hund durch das Gras (rest)
German allows quite flexible word order as long as you respect the verb position rules.
They express two different spatial relationships:
- durch das Gras – through the grass (movement passing through something)
- im Garten = in dem Garten – in the garden (location, where the action takes place)
So the dog moves through the grass, and this whole action happens in the garden. The prepositions show direction/path (durch) vs location (im/in).