Nach der Präposition wegen höre ich in diesem Satz den Genitiv, nicht den Dativ.

Questions & Answers about Nach der Präposition wegen höre ich in diesem Satz den Genitiv, nicht den Dativ.

Why is it nach der Präposition and not nach die Präposition?

Because nach takes the dative here.

So:

  • nominative: die Präposition
  • dative: der Präposition

That is why the sentence says nach der Präposition wegen.

What does nach mean here?

Here nach means after.

So nach der Präposition wegen means after the preposition wegen.

This is not the nach meaning to or toward. It is the time/order meaning: something comes after something else.

Why is wegen not followed by a noun here?

Because in this sentence, wegen is being talked about as a word, not actually used in a normal phrase.

In other words, the sentence is meta-language: it is talking about grammar.

So wegen here means something like:

That is why it stands alone.

Why does the sentence say den Genitiv and den Dativ? Aren’t those already names of cases?

Yes, they are names of cases, but in this sentence they are also nouns and they function as the direct objects of höre.

The verb hören normally takes the accusative, so we get:

Even though the words mean grammatical cases, their form in the sentence is determined by their grammatical role here, not by their meaning.

Why is the verb order höre ich instead of ich höre?

Because the sentence begins with another element: Nach der Präposition wegen.

In a German main clause, the finite verb must be in second position.

So the structure is:

  1. Nach der Präposition wegen
  2. höre
  3. ich
  4. the rest

If the sentence started with ich, then it would be:

But once the first phrase is moved to the front, the verb comes before the subject:

  • Nach der Präposition wegen höre ich ...
Why is it in diesem Satz and not in diesen Satz?

Because in here expresses location, not movement.

The meaning is in this sentence, meaning inside this sentence / in the wording of this sentence. That is a static location, so German uses the dative.

  • der Satz = masculine
  • dative singular = diesem Satz

Compare:

  • in diesem Satz = in this sentence, inside it, as location
  • in diesen Satz = into this sentence, as movement

Here we need the first one.

Why are Genitiv and Dativ capitalized?

Because in German, all nouns are capitalized.

The names of grammatical cases are nouns, so they are written with capital letters:

The same applies to Präposition and Satz.

Why does the sentence use nicht den Dativ at the end?

This is a contrast:

The speaker is saying that the form they hear after wegen is genitive, not dative.

Placing nicht before den Dativ makes the contrast very clear. It negates that noun phrase specifically.

A similar English pattern would be:

  • the genitive, not the dative
Does wegen always take the genitive?

In standard German, wegen is traditionally followed by the genitive.

Examples:

  • wegen des Wetters
  • wegen der Krankheit

However, in everyday spoken German, many native speakers also use the dative, especially in some regions:

  • wegen dem Wetter

So the sentence is pointing out that in this particular case, the speaker hears genitive, not dative.

A good rule for learners is:

  • use genitive after wegen in careful standard German
  • be aware that dative is common in speech
What exactly does ich höre den Genitiv mean here?

It does not mean that the speaker literally hears the word Genitiv.

It means the speaker hears a genitive form after wegen in the sentence being discussed.

So den Genitiv hören here means something like:

  • to hear a genitive ending
  • to hear a genitive noun phrase
  • to notice that genitive is being used

This is a common kind of shorthand when talking about grammar.

Could the sentence also be written with ich first?

Yes. A more neutral word order would be:

Or even more naturally in many contexts:

  • Ich höre in diesem Satz nach der Präposition wegen den Genitiv, nicht den Dativ.

But German often moves a phrase to the front for emphasis or structure. In your sentence, Nach der Präposition wegen is placed first because that is the topic the speaker wants to highlight.

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How do German cases work?
German has four grammatical cases: nominative (subject), accusative (direct object), dative (indirect object), and genitive (possession). The case determines the form of articles and adjectives. For example, "the dog" is "der Hund" as a subject but "den Hund" as a direct object.

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