Questions & Answers about Der Mann wirkt heute müde.
In Der Mann wirkt heute müde., wirkt means seems / appears / comes across as.
- Der Mann ist heute müde. → The man is tired today. (a factual state)
- Der Mann wirkt heute müde. → The man seems/appears tired today. (your impression)
So wirken expresses a subjective impression rather than an objective fact. You’re commenting on how he comes across to you (his behavior, face, voice, etc.), not necessarily on what is actually true.
The infinitive is wirken.
Present tense (Präsens):
- ich wirke – I seem / I have an effect
- du wirkst – you seem
- er/sie/es wirkt – he/she/it seems
- wir wirken – we seem
- ihr wirkt – you (plural) seem
- sie/Sie wirken – they / you (formal) seem
In the sentence Der Mann wirkt heute müde., der Mann = er, so you use wirkt (3rd person singular).
Der Mann is in the nominative case because it is the subject of the verb wirkt.
- Nominative masculine singular: der Mann (subject)
- Accusative masculine singular: den Mann (direct object)
Since the man is the one who is “seeming/appearing tired,” he is the subject:
- Der Mann wirkt heute müde. ✔
- Den Mann wirkt heute müde. ✘ (ungrammatical here)
Because müde is used predicatively, not attributively.
Predicative: after a verb like sein, werden, wirken, aussehen, no ending:
- Der Mann ist müde.
- Der Mann wirkt müde.
- Der Mann scheint müde.
Attributive: directly before a noun, you add an ending:
- ein müder Mann
- der müde Mann
- mit einem müden Mann
So in Der Mann wirkt heute müde., müde stays in its basic form because it is a predicative adjective after the verb wirken.
In German:
All nouns are capitalized:
- der Mann, das Haus, die Freude
Adjectives are normally not capitalized:
- müde, groß, schnell
So:
- Mann → noun → capitalized
- müde → adjective → lowercase
Can I change the word order of heute? Are these sentences all correct?
- Der Mann wirkt heute müde.
- Heute wirkt der Mann müde.
- Der Mann wirkt müde heute.
All three are grammatically possible, but they differ in how natural they sound and what is emphasized:
Der Mann wirkt heute müde.
– Very natural, neutral statement. Light emphasis on heute (today).Heute wirkt der Mann müde.
– Also very natural. Stronger emphasis on heute (as opposed to other days). Common if you start by talking about what’s going on today in general.Der Mann wirkt müde heute.
– Grammatically okay, but sounds more unusual or poetic; in normal speech, Germans rarely put heute at the very end like this in such a simple sentence.
The most typical everyday versions are Der Mann wirkt heute müde. and Heute wirkt der Mann müde.
German main clauses follow the V2 rule: the conjugated verb must be in second position.
- Der Mann (1st element) wirkt (2nd element) heute müde.
- Heute (1st element) wirkt (2nd element) der Mann müde.
Even if the first “element” is more than one word, the finite verb still has to come second. You can move other parts around, but wirkt must stay in that 2nd slot in a main clause.
Yes, you can say Der Mann ist heute müde.
Difference:
Der Mann ist heute müde.
→ States his condition as a fact: he is tired.Der Mann wirkt heute müde.
→ States your impression: he seems/appears tired to you.
So ist describes his actual state; wirkt describes how he comes across. If you are only observing from the outside (you don’t really know how he feels), wirkt sounds more precise and careful.
Yes, you can say that, and it is very common:
Der Mann sieht heute müde aus.
→ Literally: The man looks tired today.
→ Focus is clearly on his appearance (face, eyes, posture).Der Mann wirkt heute müde.
→ Broader: he comes across as tired, which can include looks, voice, behavior, energy level, etc.
So sieht … aus is specifically about visual appearance, while wirkt is more general: overall effect/impression.
Wirkt is present tense (Präsens).
German normally uses only one present tense for what English expresses with both simple present and present continuous:
- Der Mann wirkt heute müde. can correspond to:
- The man seems tired today.
- The man is acting/appearing tired today.
German does not have a separate continuous tense form like “is seeming”. Context tells you whether it’s about right now, today in general, or a repeated habit.
Wirken is quite general and can be used with many adjectives:
- Sie wirkt glücklich. – She seems happy.
- Er wirkt sehr selbstbewusst. – He comes across as very confident.
- Die Stadt wirkt gefährlich. – The city seems dangerous.
- Das Zimmer wirkt klein. – The room appears small.
You can also use it in other meanings like “to have an effect” or “to work” (in the sense of “to be effective”):
- Das Medikament wirkt schnell. – The medicine works quickly / takes effect quickly.
- Seine Rede hat stark gewirkt. – His speech had a strong impact.
In Der Mann wirkt heute müde., it is the “seems / appears / comes across as” meaning.