Breakdown of Im September helfen meine Enkel im Garten, während ich ihnen Tee mache.
Questions & Answers about Im September helfen meine Enkel im Garten, während ich ihnen Tee mache.
im is the contraction of in dem.
With months, German normally uses in + dative, so you say:
- im September
- im Mai
- im Winter
So im September is the normal German way to say in September.
German main clauses follow the verb-second rule. The finite verb must come in the second position.
So if the sentence starts with the time expression Im September, that takes the first position, and the verb helfen must come next:
- Meine Enkel helfen im Garten.
- Im September helfen meine Enkel im Garten.
In the second version, meine Enkel comes after the verb because Im September is occupying the first slot.
Because the subject is meine Enkel, which is plural.
The verb helfen is conjugated like this:
- ich helfe
- du hilfst
- er/sie hilft
- wir helfen
- ihr helft
- sie/Sie helfen
Only the du and er/sie/es forms change the stem vowel to i. The plural form stays helfen.
Because Enkel is one of those German nouns whose singular and plural can look the same.
So you get:
- der Enkel = grandson / grandchild
- die Enkel = grandsons / grandchildren
In this sentence, you know it is plural because of:
- meine instead of mein
- the plural verb helfen
Here meine Enkel is the subject of the sentence, so it is in the nominative plural.
The possessive word mein- changes its ending depending on case and number. In the nominative plural, it becomes meine:
- mein Enkel = my grandson / my grandchild
- meine Enkel = my grandchildren
If it were accusative masculine singular, you would get meinen, but that is not what is happening here.
Because this sentence describes a location, not movement toward a destination.
German uses:
- in + dative for location: im Garten = in the garden
- in + accusative for direction or movement: in den Garten = into the garden
Compare:
- Meine Enkel helfen im Garten. = They are working there.
- Meine Enkel gehen in den Garten. = They go into the garden.
Because während introduces a subordinate clause.
In German, subordinate clauses are normally separated from the main clause by a comma:
- Im September helfen meine Enkel im Garten, während ich ihnen Tee mache.
This is standard German punctuation.
Because während is a subordinating conjunction, and subordinating conjunctions send the finite verb to the end of the clause.
So:
- main clause order: ich mache ihnen Tee
- after während: während ich ihnen Tee mache
This also happens with words like:
- weil
- dass
- obwohl
- wenn
ihnen is dative plural, and here it means to them or for them.
In this sentence:
- ich = subject
- ihnen = indirect object, dative
- Tee = thing being made
So ich ihnen Tee mache means I make tea for them.
This is a very common pattern in German:
- jemandem etwas machen
- jemandem etwas geben
- jemandem etwas bringen
Because in German, an unstressed pronoun often comes before a full noun phrase.
So this sounds natural:
- ich ihnen Tee mache
That is especially common when the pronoun is dative and the noun is the thing involved:
- Ich gebe ihm das Buch.
- Sie bringt uns Kaffee.
- Ich mache ihnen Tee.
So the order here is very typical German word order.
Lowercase ihnen means to them.
Capital Ihnen is the formal to you.
So:
- ich ihnen Tee mache = I make them tea
- ich Ihnen Tee mache = I make you tea in a formal situation
That capital letter makes an important difference.
German often leaves out the article with food and drink words when they are used in a general way, especially in common expressions.
So Tee machen is perfectly natural.
You could compare:
- Ich mache Tee.
- Sie kocht Kaffee.
- Wir machen Frühstück.
If you wanted to emphasize a tea as one serving, you might say einen Tee, but the version without an article is the more neutral wording here.
Yes.
In this sentence, während is a conjunction meaning while because it is followed by a clause:
- während ich ihnen Tee mache
But während can also be a preposition meaning during:
- während des Sommers = during the summer
So the meaning depends on what comes after it:
- während + clause -> while
- während + noun phrase -> during