Accusative for Definite Time
Drop the preposition and use the accusative case for specific, definite time expressions in German.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use accusative for time expressions without a preposition.
- Only masculine nouns change their endings to -en.
- Applies to specific days, months, and durations.
- Feminine and neuter nouns remain unchanged in form.
Quick Reference
| Gender | Determiner | Example Phrase | English Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine | jeden / diesen | jeden Dienstag | every Tuesday |
| Masculine | nächsten | nächsten Monat | next month |
| Feminine | jede / diese | jede Woche | every week |
| Feminine | letzte | letzte Nacht | last night |
| Neuter | jedes / dieses |
dieses Jahr
|
this year |
| Neuter | nächstes | nächstes Wochenende | next weekend |
| Plural | alle | alle zwei Tage | every two days |
أمثلة رئيسية
3 من 8Ich besuche dich nächsten Samstag.
I will visit you next Saturday.
Wir arbeiten den ganzen Tag.
We are working the whole day.
Ich habe einen Monat in Paris gelebt.
I lived in Paris for one month.
The Masculine Magnet
If the word ends in 'Tag', 'Monat', or 'Abend', it's masculine. Give it that '-en' ending every time you skip the preposition!
No 'Für' for Duration
English speakers love saying 'for a week'. In German, just say 'eine Woche'. Adding 'für' is often unnecessary and sounds a bit like a translation app.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use accusative for time expressions without a preposition.
- Only masculine nouns change their endings to -en.
- Applies to specific days, months, and durations.
- Feminine and neuter nouns remain unchanged in form.
Overview
Ever feel like German prepositions are just extra baggage? Sometimes they are. You can express time without them. This is called the adverbial accusative. It sounds fancy but it is very practical. You use it for definite points in time. You also use it for specific durations. Think of it as the 'naked' time expression. No an, in, or um is needed here. It makes your sentences punchy and direct. Native speakers use this constantly in daily life. It is perfect for scheduling and storytelling.
How This Grammar Works
This rule triggers when you skip the preposition. Normally, you might say am Montag. That uses the dative case with an. But you can just say jeden Montag. Now, the preposition is gone. The time expression becomes the direct object's twin. It takes the accusative case automatically. It acts like a compass for your sentence. It tells us exactly when or how long. Most of the work happens with masculine nouns. Feminine and neuter nouns are quite lazy here. They do not change their form at all. It is like a grammar shortcut for busy people.
Formation Pattern
- 1Identify the gender of your time noun.
- 2Check if you are using a preposition.
- 3If no preposition exists, apply accusative endings.
- 4For masculine nouns, change
dertoden. - 5Use endings like
-enfor adjectives and determiners. - 6Keep feminine nouns as
dieor with-eendings. - 7Keep neuter nouns as
dasor with-esendings. - 8Plural nouns stay in their standard accusative form.
When To Use It
You use this for specific, definite times. Use it for days of the week. Use it for months and years. It is perfect for frequency words like jeder. Use it when describing a whole duration. Imagine you are in a job interview. You want to say you worked all summer. You say den ganzen Sommer. It sounds professional and fluid. Use it when making plans with friends. Nächsten Freitag sounds better than a long sentence. It works for 'last', 'this', and 'next' expressions. If you can point to it on a calendar, use it.
When Not To Use It
Do not use this for vague, indefinite times. If you say 'one day' generally, use the genitive. That would be eines Tages. Do not use it if a preposition is present. If you say im Januar, that is dative. The preposition 'eats' the accusative rule. Also, avoid it for clock times. We usually use um for specific hours. You would not say acht Uhr alone to mean 'at eight'. You still need um acht Uhr for clarity. Think of it like a puzzle piece. It only fits when the preposition slot is empty.
Common Mistakes
Many people forget the masculine -en ending. They say nächster Montag instead of nächsten Montag. Remember, masculine is the only 'active' changer here. Another mistake is adding a preposition where it belongs. People say an jeden Tag. That is redundant and grammatically incorrect. Just say jeden Tag. It is shorter and correct. Some try to use it for 'in a week'. That requires in einer Woche. The accusative is for 'this week' (diese Woche). Don't mix up duration with starting points. Yes, even native speakers trip over this sometimes. Just keep your eye on the masculine nouns.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Compare this to the dative with prepositions. Am Wochenende (dative) vs. dieses Wochenende (accusative). Both mean roughly the same thing. However, the accusative version often feels more specific. It focuses on the entirety of the time. Compare it to the genitive for indefinite time. Eines Abends means 'one evening' (who knows which?). Diesen Abend means 'this specific evening'. One is a ghost, the other is a guest. Use the accusative when the date is set in stone. Use the dative when you need a prepositional bridge.
Quick FAQ
Q. Does this work for die Woche?
A. Yes, but die stays die in accusative.
Q. Can I use it for 'every day'?
A. Absolutely, use jeden Tag for that.
Q. Is it formal or informal?
A. It is both! It is standard German grammar.
Q. What about das Jahr?
A. Neuter stays the same, so dieses Jahr is correct.
Q. Do I need a comma?
A. No, it fits right into the sentence flow.
Reference Table
| Gender | Determiner | Example Phrase | English Translation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine | jeden / diesen | jeden Dienstag | every Tuesday |
| Masculine | nächsten | nächsten Monat | next month |
| Feminine | jede / diese | jede Woche | every week |
| Feminine | letzte | letzte Nacht | last night |
| Neuter | jedes / dieses |
dieses Jahr
|
this year |
| Neuter | nächstes | nächstes Wochenende | next weekend |
| Plural | alle | alle zwei Tage | every two days |
The Masculine Magnet
If the word ends in 'Tag', 'Monat', or 'Abend', it's masculine. Give it that '-en' ending every time you skip the preposition!
No 'Für' for Duration
English speakers love saying 'for a week'. In German, just say 'eine Woche'. Adding 'für' is often unnecessary and sounds a bit like a translation app.
Calendar Check
If you can point to the specific square on a calendar, you are safe to use the accusative. It's for definite moments, not vague 'somedays'.
Efficiency is Key
Germans value efficiency. Dropping the preposition `an` to say `nächsten Freitag` is the linguistic equivalent of taking the Autobahn.
أمثلة
8Ich besuche dich nächsten Samstag.
Focus: nächsten Samstag
I will visit you next Saturday.
Saturday is masculine, so 'nächster' becomes 'nächsten'.
Wir arbeiten den ganzen Tag.
Focus: den ganzen Tag
We are working the whole day.
This shows duration using the accusative.
Ich habe einen Monat in Paris gelebt.
Focus: einen Monat
I lived in Paris for one month.
No 'für' is needed for duration here.
Letzten Endes hat es geklappt.
Focus: Letzten Endes
In the end, it worked out.
This is a fixed expression using the accusative.
Wir erwarten Ihre Antwort kommenden Montag.
Focus: kommenden Montag
We expect your answer this coming Monday.
'Kommenden' is a formal way to say 'next'.
✗ Ich komme an jeden Tag. → ✓ Ich komme jeden Tag.
Focus: jeden Tag
I come every day.
Remove the preposition 'an' when using 'jeden'.
✗ Nächster Monat reise ich. → ✓ Nächsten Monat reise ich.
Focus: Nächsten Monat
Next month I am traveling.
Masculine time expressions need the -en ending.
Diesen Freitagabend habe ich leider keine Zeit.
Focus: Diesen Freitagabend
This Friday evening I unfortunately have no time.
Compound nouns take the gender of the last word (Abend - masc).
اختبر نفسك
Choose the correct masculine ending for the time expression.
Ich gehe ___ Montag zum Fitnessstudio.
'Montag' is masculine and there is no preposition, so we use the accusative 'jeden'.
Complete the sentence for a neuter noun.
Wir fliegen ___ Jahr nach Spanien.
'Jahr' is neuter. In the accusative, neuter determiners end in -es.
Pick the correct duration expression.
Sie hat ___ ganze Nacht gelernt.
'Nacht' is feminine. The accusative form of 'die' remains 'die'.
🎉 النتيجة: /3
وسائل تعلم بصرية
Preposition vs. Accusative
Should I use Accusative?
Is there a preposition (an, in, vor)?
Is the time specific/definite?
Is it Masculine?
The 'N' Rule for Masculine
Masculine (Changes)
- • den
- • jeden
- • nächsten
- • letzten
Others (Stay Same)
- • die / jede
- • das / jedes
- • alle (Plural)
الأسئلة الشائعة
21 أسئلةIt refers to specific times you can identify, like diesen Mittwoch. It is not for vague concepts like 'sometime'.
Yes, you can say letztes Jahr or nächstes Jahr. Since Jahr is neuter, the ending is -es.
Nothing changes! Die Woche stays die Woche in the accusative.
Yes, jeden Tag is the standard way to say 'every day'. It is much more common than using a preposition.
Yes, when you say Warten Sie einen Moment, you are using the accusative for duration. Moment is masculine.
Yes, seasons are masculine. So Sommer becomes letzten Sommer.
Use die ganze Nacht. Since Nacht is feminine, the article remains die.
You can say am Montag, but you cannot say an jeden Montag. Choose one or the other.
That is different. Use einmal pro Woche or einmal die Woche. The second one is accusative!
No, heute, morgen, and gestern are adverbs. They don't have cases or endings.
That is the genitive case. It is used for indefinite time, meaning 'one day' (any day).
Yes, Wochenende is neuter. So you say dieses Wochenende.
It is extremely common. It is the standard way to express 'all day long'.
Plurals like alle zwei Wochen (every two weeks) also follow this rule. The plural accusative is alle.
Not really. As long as the time expression isn't the subject, it will be accusative.
Usually no. For 'at five o'clock', always use um fünf Uhr. The accusative alone doesn't work well for hours.
In time expressions without prepositions, yes. It shows the masculine accusative ending.
Yes, it is a core part of A2. It helps you move past basic prepositional phrases.
People will still understand you. However, saying an nächsten Montag sounds very 'foreign' to a native ear.
Yes, Abend is masculine. So you say diesen Abend or jeden Abend.
It is letzte Woche. Since Woche is feminine, it does not get the -n ending.
قواعد ذات صلة
Nominative Case for Subject
Overview Welcome to your first day of German Case School! Don't worry, it's not as scary as it sounds. Think of the Nom...
Indefinite Articles: ein/eine
Overview Welcome to your first big step in German! Today we are looking at `ein` and `eine`. These are the German versi...
Accusative Preposition - um
Overview Welcome to your guide on one of the most useful words in German: `um`. Think of `um` as a circle. It is a prep...
Two-Way Preposition - an
Overview Welcome to one of the most useful words in German: `an`. It is a "two-way" preposition. In German, we call thes...
Two-Way
Overview Welcome to one of the most exciting parts of German grammar! Today, we are diving into Two-Way Prepositions. I...
التعليقات (0)
تسجيل الدخول للتعليقابدأ تعلم اللغات مجاناً
ابدأ التعلم مجاناً