La lógica oculta de los adjetivos en alemán B1
Today I'll explain how adjectives governing a specific case work in German: dative, accusative, or genitive, without a preposition. In Spanish, we usually use a preposition (for example, "fiel a," "acostumbrado a," "consciente de"), but in German, grammatical case often fulfills that function. You'll see step by step the adjectives governing the dative, such as "dankbar," "ähnlich," "treu," "klar," and adjectives of sensation like "kalt," "heiß," and "peinlich." Then we'll move on to adjectives governing the accusative, which appear in constructions of measurement or quantity ("einen Meter dick," "zehn Kilo schwer") or in adjectives derived from transitive verbs like "gewohnt," "los," and "wert." Finally, we review adjectives with the genitive case, such as "bewusst," "sicher," "würdig," "müde," and "verdächtig," which are more formal but very important. This video will help you understand why some German adjectives take the dative, accusative, or genitive case, and to recognize them without relying on memorizing lists. A practical and contrastive guide for German students who want to understand the logic of grammatical case from a German perspective. 00:00 Introduction – Adjectives that govern a case (without a preposition) 00:59 Adjectives with the dative case: "dankbar", "ähnlich", "treu", "klar" 02:55 Dative adjectives of sensation: "kalt", "heiß", "übel", "wichtig", "peinlich", "angenehm" 04:09 Accusative adjectives: measure and quantity ("einen Meter dick", "zehn Kilo schwer") 05:52 Accusative adjectives derived from transitive verbs: "gewohnt", "los", "wert" 07:44 Genitive adjectives: "bewusst", "sicher", "würdig", "müde", "verdächtig" 09:50 Closing #GermanOnline #LearnGerman #GermanForSpanishSpeakers #GermanClasses #German

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