Breakdown of Im Tutorium simulieren wir eine mündliche Prüfung.
Questions & Answers about Im Tutorium simulieren wir eine mündliche Prüfung.
Im is a contraction of in dem.
- The preposition in is followed by the dative case when it expresses location (where something happens).
- Tutorium is a neuter noun: das Tutorium.
- Dative singular of das Tutorium is dem Tutorium.
- in dem Tutorium contracts to im Tutorium.
So grammatically: in (preposition) + dem (dative article) → im.
All nouns in German are capitalized, so Tutorium must start with a capital letter.
A Tutorium is usually:
- a small-group session (often at university),
- led by a Tutor / Tutorin (tutor, often a more advanced student or assistant),
- used to practise, review, or deepen material from a main lecture.
It’s similar to an English tutorial or recitation session, not just any class.
German has the verb-second (V2) rule in main clauses:
- The conjugated verb must be in second position.
- The first position can be many things: the subject, an adverb, a prepositional phrase, etc.
In your sentence:
- Im Tutorium = first position (a prepositional phrase)
- simulieren = second position (the verb)
- wir = third element (the subject)
- eine mündliche Prüfung = rest of the sentence
If you start with the subject instead, you get:
- Wir simulieren im Tutorium eine mündliche Prüfung.
Both are correct. The difference is mainly emphasis / information structure:
- Im Tutorium simulieren wir … focuses first on where this happens.
- Wir simulieren im Tutorium … starts by focusing on who is doing it.
There are two important cases here:
Dative: Im Tutorium
- in (with a static location: where something happens) requires the dative case.
- das Tutorium → dem Tutorium (dative singular)
- in dem Tutorium → im Tutorium
Accusative: eine mündliche Prüfung
- This is the direct object of the verb simulieren.
- Direct objects in German usually take the accusative case.
- eine is the accusative singular article for a feminine noun.
So:
- Im Tutorium = dative (location, object of in),
- eine mündliche Prüfung = accusative (direct object).
Eine tells you that Prüfung is feminine.
- Indefinite articles in the accusative singular:
- ein Mann (masc.)
- eine Frau (fem.)
- ein Kind (neut.)
Because the phrase is eine mündliche Prüfung, Prüfung must be:
- die Prüfung (feminine noun),
- in the accusative singular as a direct object → eine Prüfung.
How to know that Prüfung is feminine?
- You usually just have to learn the gender with the noun: die Prüfung.
- A rough pattern: many nouns ending in -ung are feminine (e.g. die Zeitung, die Wohnung, die Bedeutung).
The form mündliche is an attributive adjective (directly before a noun) and must agree in gender, number, and case with Prüfung.
We have:
- eine (indefinite article)
- feminine
- accusative singular
In that pattern, the adjective takes -e:
- eine mündliche Prüfung (fem. acc. sg.)
- Compare:
- eine schriftliche Prüfung (a written exam)
- eine interessante Prüfung (an interesting exam)
General rule: after eine with a feminine singular noun (in nominative or accusative), the adjective ends in -e.
a) Plural (oral exams)
- Noun: die mündlichen Prüfungen (plural)
- Sentence:
Im Tutorium simulieren wir mündliche Prüfungen.
(No article, plural; adjective takes -e.)
With a plural article:
- Im Tutorium simulieren wir die mündlichen Prüfungen.
- die = definite article, plural
- mündlichen = adjective ending -en after a definite article in plural accusative.
b) Definite article singular (the oral exam)
- Im Tutorium simulieren wir die mündliche Prüfung.
- die = feminine accusative singular
- mündliche = adjective ending -e (after die, fem. sg. acc.)
Yes. German often uses the simple present tense where English uses present progressive or future with will.
Im Tutorium simulieren wir eine mündliche Prüfung. can mean:
- A general statement: this is what we (typically) do in the tutorial.
- A planned future activity: this is what we will do (e.g. next week) in the tutorial, especially if the time is clear from context.
If you want to make the future more explicit, you can add a time expression:
- Nächste Woche simulieren wir im Tutorium eine mündliche Prüfung.
- Or use werden: Nächste Woche werden wir im Tutorium eine mündliche Prüfung simulieren.
But in many everyday contexts, the simple present is enough for future plans.
Yes, In dem Tutorium simulieren wir eine mündliche Prüfung. is grammatically correct.
However:
- Im is the standard, natural contraction in everyday speech and writing.
- In dem Tutorium sounds more formal, heavy, or emphatic, and is much less common in this context.
In normal usage, natives would almost always say Im Tutorium here.
They are related but not identical:
Im Tutorium
- Literally in the tutorial (inside that session).
- Neutral, most common for where something takes place.
Beim Tutorium
- Contraction of bei dem Tutorium.
- Focuses more on in connection with / on the occasion of the tutorial.
- In this sentence, Beim Tutorium simulieren wir … would sound unusual; it suggests something happening somehow around or in association with the tutorial, not clearly in the session.
Während des Tutoriums
- Means during the tutorial.
- Focuses on the time span rather than location.
- Während des Tutoriums simulieren wir eine mündliche Prüfung.
= During the tutorial, we simulate an oral exam.
So the most natural phrase for the intended meaning (in that class session) is Im Tutorium.
They are similar but not always exactly the same:
- Both involve small-group teaching or support sessions.
- In many German universities, a Tutorium is:
- attached to a bigger lecture,
- often led by a more advanced student,
- focuses on exercises, questions, exam preparation.
In English, tutorial might also be:
- a one-to-one or very small group teaching session (e.g. in the UK),
- or an online instructional video/article.
So Tutorium ≈ (university) tutorial / recitation / small-group practice session, depending on the context. In this sentence, you can safely think of it as a tutorial group/session.
Yes, that order is completely correct:
- Wir simulieren im Tutorium eine mündliche Prüfung.
Both versions obey the verb-second rule:
Im Tutorium simulieren wir eine mündliche Prüfung.
- Emphasis starts with where (in the tutorial).
Wir simulieren im Tutorium eine mündliche Prüfung.
- Emphasis starts with who (we).
In terms of meaning, they are basically the same. Native speakers switch between such orders mainly for rhythm and focus, not for a big change in content.