Declension of "schweizer sennenhund" in German

Singular and plural for Schweizer Sennenhund, mtranslation to English Swiss cattledog

Singular, Maskulinum, ohne Artikel

Nominativ (Wer? Was?) Schweizer Sennenhund
Genitiv (Wessen?) Schweizer Sennenhundes / Sennenhunds
Dativ (Wem?) Schweizer Sennenhund / Sennenhunde
Akkusativ (Wen? Was?) Schweizer Sennenhund

Plural, ohne Artikel

Nominativ (Wer? Was?) Schweizer Sennenhunde
Genitiv (Wessen?) Schweizer Sennenhunde
Dativ (Wem?) Schweizer Sennenhunden
Akkusativ (Wen? Was?) Schweizer Sennenhunde

Singular, Maskulinum, bestimmter Artikel

Nominativ (Wer? Was?) der Schweizer Sennenhund
Genitiv (Wessen?) des Schweizer Sennenhundes / Sennenhunds
Dativ (Wem?) dem Schweizer Sennenhund / Sennenhunde
Akkusativ (Wen? Was?) den Schweizer Sennenhund

Plural, bestimmter Artikel

Nominativ (Wer? Was?) die Schweizer Sennenhunde
Genitiv (Wessen?) der Schweizer Sennenhunde
Dativ (Wem?) den Schweizer Sennenhunden
Akkusativ (Wen? Was?) die Schweizer Sennenhunde

Singular, Maskulinum, unbestimmter Artikel

Nominativ (Wer? Was?) ein Schweizer Sennenhund
Genitiv (Wessen?) eines Schweizer Sennenhundes / Sennenhunds
Dativ (Wem?) einem Schweizer Sennenhund / Sennenhunde
Akkusativ (Wen? Was?) einen Schweizer Sennenhund

Plural, Possesivpronomen

Nominativ (Wer? Was?) meine Schweizer Sennenhunde
Genitiv (Wessen?) meiner Schweizer Sennenhunde
Dativ (Wem?) meinen Schweizer Sennenhunden
Akkusativ (Wen? Was?) meine Schweizer Sennenhunde
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Conjugation of German verbs

German is spoken as a first or regularly used second language by around 130 million people in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Belgium, Liechtenstein, and South Tyrol (Italy). For a short trip to these countries, it is enough to learn a few phrases from a phrase book. But if you plan to stay for contract work or long-term education, you are to study vocabulary and grammar.

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German Nouns and Adjectives

German nouns are declined by cases (Nominativ, Genetiv, Dativ, Akkusativ) and numbers, which often involves changing endings. German adjectives always agree with the nouns to which they refer, they are declined in cases, genders and numbers. It can be complex for language learners to identify and memorize the type of declension: strong declension (Tisch, Wasser, Buch, Gebäude, Haus), weak (Student, Mensch, Herr, Affe, Agent), feminine (Sprache, Schwester, Arbeit, Milch, Politik) or mixed one (Glaube, Doktor, Herz).

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