Kannst du mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?

Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching German grammar and vocabulary.

Start learning German now

Questions & Answers about Kannst du mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?

Why is kannst at the beginning of the sentence?

Because this is a yes/no question. In German, the conjugated verb comes first in this kind of question.

  • Statement word order: Du kannst mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben.
  • Question word order: Kannst du mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?

So kannst moves to the front because the speaker is asking a question.

What exactly is kannst?

Kannst is the du-form of the verb können, which means to be able to / can.

Here is the present tense of können:

  • ich kann
  • du kannst
  • er/sie/es kann
  • wir können
  • ihr könnt
  • sie/Sie können

So kannst du means can you when speaking to one person informally.

Why does the sentence use du? Could it also use Sie?

Yes. Du is the informal singular word for you. You use it with friends, family, children, and people you know well.

If you want to be more formal or polite, you would use Sie instead:

  • Können Sie mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?

That is the formal version.
So the choice between du and Sie depends on the relationship between the speakers.

Why is it mir and not mich?

Because mir is the dative form of ich.

With geben, German usually works like this:

  • someone gives something to someone

The someone is usually in the dative case, and the something is usually in the accusative case.

So in this sentence:

  • mir = the person receiving something
  • eine einfache Erklärung = the thing being given

That is why mir is correct, not mich.

Why does mir come before eine einfache Erklärung?

This is a very common German word-order pattern.

German often places a pronoun earlier than a full noun phrase. Since mir is a short pronoun and eine einfache Erklärung is a longer noun phrase, mir naturally comes first.

So this order is very normal:

  • Kannst du mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?

If you changed the order, it would usually sound less natural.

Why is geben at the end?

Because the sentence uses a modal verb: können.

In German, when a modal verb is conjugated, the main verb usually goes to the end in the infinitive form.

So here:

  • kannst = conjugated modal verb
  • geben = infinitive main verb at the end

This is a standard pattern:

  • Ich kann kommen.
  • Kannst du helfen?
  • Wir können das machen.

So geben is at the end because it depends on kannst.

Why is it eine einfache Erklärung?

Because Erklärung is a feminine noun.

That affects both the article and the adjective ending:

  • eine = feminine singular article here
  • einfache = adjective with the correct ending for this noun phrase
  • Erklärung = feminine singular noun

Also, this whole phrase is the direct object of geben, so it is in the accusative case. In this case, the feminine article is still eine, so it looks the same as the nominative form.

Why does einfache end in -e?

Because German adjectives change their endings depending on:

  • the gender
  • the case
  • whether there is an article before them

Here, the adjective einfach comes after eine and before the feminine singular noun Erklärung. In this pattern, the adjective takes -e:

  • eine einfache Erklärung

This is part of German adjective declension. It can feel complicated at first, but this particular pattern is very common.

What does bitte do in this sentence?

Bitte makes the request sound more polite.

Without bitte, the sentence is still grammatical, but it can sound more direct:

  • Kannst du mir eine einfache Erklärung geben?

With bitte, it sounds softer and more natural in many situations:

  • Kannst du mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?

German speakers use bitte very often in requests, just like English speakers use please.

Is Kannst du ... ? polite enough, or would German prefer something softer?

Kannst du ... ? is usually fine in informal situations. It is a normal, polite way to ask someone you know.

But if you want to sound softer, German often uses forms like:

  • Könntest du mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?
  • Können Sie mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?
  • Könnten Sie mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?

In general:

  • Kannst du ... ? = normal informal request
  • Könntest du ... ? = softer informal request
  • Können Sie ... ? = normal formal request
  • Könnten Sie ... ? = softer formal request

So yes, Kannst du ... ? is fine, but German has even more polite options.

Why is Erklärung capitalized?

Because all nouns are capitalized in German.

So in this sentence:

  • Erklärung is a noun, so it gets a capital letter
  • einfache is an adjective, so it does not

This is one of the most noticeable spelling rules in German.

Can bitte move to a different place in the sentence?

Yes, bitte is somewhat flexible, but some positions sound more natural than others.

These are all possible:

  • Kannst du mir bitte eine einfache Erklärung geben?
  • Kannst du bitte mir eine einfache Erklärung geben?
  • Kannst du mir eine einfache Erklärung geben, bitte?

The first version is the most natural and standard here.
So while bitte can move, learners should probably stick with Kannst du mir bitte ... geben? until they get used to German word order.