Relative Pronouns in Accusative
Relative pronouns in the accusative transform choppy sentences into professional German by linking actions to their direct objects.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Relative pronouns link two sentences by describing a noun in more detail.
- Use 'den', 'die', 'das' when the noun is the direct object.
- The gender comes from the main noun; the case from the relative verb.
- Always place a comma before the pronoun and the verb at the end.
Quick Reference
| Gender/Number | Nominative (Subject) | Accusative (Object) | Memory Hook |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine |
der
|
den | Only one that changes! |
| Feminine |
die
|
die
|
Stays the same. |
| Neuter |
das
|
das
|
Stays the same. |
| Plural |
die
|
die
|
Always 'die'. |
मुख्य उदाहरण
3 / 9Der Salat, den ich bestellt habe, schmeckt fantastisch.
The salad that I ordered tastes fantastic.
Die E-Mail, die du geschrieben hast, war sehr höflich.
The email that you wrote was very polite.
Alles, was ich sehe, gehört mir.
Everything that I see belongs to me.
The 'Welcher' Trick
If you have two 'das' sounds together (e.g., 'Das Kind, das das Buch liest'), replace the first 'das' with 'welches' to sound more elegant and avoid repetition.
The Comma is Non-Negotiable
Think of the comma as a seatbelt for your relative clause. Without it, the whole sentence crashes. Always put it right before the relative pronoun.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Relative pronouns link two sentences by describing a noun in more detail.
- Use 'den', 'die', 'das' when the noun is the direct object.
- The gender comes from the main noun; the case from the relative verb.
- Always place a comma before the pronoun and the verb at the end.
Overview
Ever felt like your German sentences are just too... short? You know the feeling. You say one sentence. Then you say another. It feels like a robot is talking. "Ich habe einen Hund. Der Hund ist süß." It works. But you are at B2 now. You want to flow. You want to sound like a native. Relative clauses are your secret weapon. They let you glue sentences together. They act like a bridge between two ideas. In this lesson, we focus on the Accusative version. This is for when the thing you are describing is the object of the action. It is the target. It is the thing being seen, bought, or loved. Think of it as a way to add a "plus one" to your noun. It makes your German smoother and more sophisticated. Plus, it saves you from repeating the same noun over and over. Nobody wants to hear "der Tisch" five times in one minute.
How This Grammar Works
Imagine you have two separate thoughts. Thought A: "Ich sehe den Film." Thought B: "Der Film ist spannend." You want to combine them. You want to say "The film that I am watching is exciting." Here, the film is the object of your watching. That is why we use the Accusative. The relative pronoun takes the place of the noun in the second part. It points back to the main noun. We call this main noun the "antecedent." The magic happens in the comma. In German, you must use a comma to start a relative clause. It is like a grammar traffic light. It tells the reader: "Wait, extra info incoming!" Then, you pick the right pronoun. Finally, you kick the verb to the end of the sentence. German verbs love the end of a relative clause. They feel safe there.
Formation Pattern
- 1Building these is a three-step dance. Don't worry, you won't trip.
- 2Find the gender: Look at the noun in the main sentence. Is it
der,die, ordas? This decides the "family" of your pronoun. - 3Determine the case: Look at the verb in the relative clause. Does it need an object? If you are saying "the man whom I see," the verb
sehenneeds an Accusative object. - 4Pick the pronoun:
- 5Masculine:
den(The only one that changes! The rebel of the group.) - 6Feminine:
die(Stays the same as Nominative. Easy!) - 7Neuter:
das(Also stays the same. Relax.) - 8Plural:
die(Consistent and friendly.) - 9The Verb Kick: Put your verb at the very end of the relative clause.
- 10Example:
Der Kuchen(masculine) +ich esse ihn(Accusative) = "Der Kuchen, den ich esse, ist lecker."
When To Use It
You will use this constantly in real life.
- Job Interviews: "Die Projekte, die ich geleitet habe, waren erfolgreich." (The projects I managed were successful.)
- Ordering Food: "Den Wein, den Sie empfohlen haben, nehme ich." (I'll take the wine you recommended.)
- Asking Directions: "Die Straße, die Sie suchen, ist gleich links." (The street you are looking for is right on the left.)
- Socializing: "Der Freund, den ich gestern getroffen habe, grüßt dich." (The friend I met yesterday says hi.)
Whenever you want to define *which* specific thing you are talking about, reach for this rule. It adds precision. It shows you know how the object-action relationship works in German.
When Not To Use It
Don't use Accusative if the noun is the subject of the relative clause. That is Nominative territory.
- Wrong: "Der Mann, den dort steht..." (The man whom stands there...)
- Right: "Der Mann, der dort steht..." (The man who stands there...)
Also, watch out for prepositions. If your relative clause starts with mit or von, you need the Dative case.
- Wrong: "Die Frau, die ich mit spreche..."
- Right: "Die Frau, mit der ich spreche..."
Keep it simple. If there is no preposition and the noun is just the direct object, stick to Accusative.
Common Mistakes
- 1The Masculine Mix-up: This is the big one. People use
derwhen they should useden. Remember: if the man is being *acted upon*, useden. Yes, even native speakers mess this up when they speak too fast. - 2The Missing Comma: In English, commas are optional sometimes. In German, they are mandatory. No comma, no party.
- 3Verb Placement: Learners often put the verb in the second position like a normal sentence.
- ✗ Wrong: "Das Buch, das ich lese heute..."
- ✓ Correct: "Das Buch, das ich heute lese..."
- 1Repeating the Pronoun: Don't use
ihn,sie, oresinside the relative clause if you already have the relative pronoun.
- ✗ Wrong: "Der Film, den ich ihn mag..." (The film, which I like him...)
- ✓ Correct: "Der Film, den ich mag..."
Contrast With Similar Patterns
How is this different from Nominative?
- Nominative: The noun does the action. "Der Hund, der bellt." (The dog that barks.)
- Accusative: The noun receives the action. "Der Hund, den ich füttere." (The dog that I feed.)
It is also different from the word dass (with two 's').
das(one 's') is a relative pronoun. It refers to a specific noun. "Das Haus, das ich kaufe."dass(two 's') is a conjunction. It introduces a thought or fact. "Ich weiß, dass du kommst."
Pro tip: If you can replace it with "welches," use one 's'. If not, use two.
Quick FAQ
Q. Do I always need a comma?
A. Yes. Always. Every single time.
Q. Does the gender ever change inside the clause?
A. No. The gender comes from the main noun. The case comes from the verb in the clause.
Q. Is welcher/welche/welches the same?
A. Yes, but it sounds very formal. Stick to der/die/das for daily life unless you are writing a legal document.
Q. What if the verb is helfen?
A. Helfen is a Dative verb. You would need dem or der, not Accusative. Check your verb list!
Reference Table
| Gender/Number | Nominative (Subject) | Accusative (Object) | Memory Hook |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine |
der
|
den | Only one that changes! |
| Feminine |
die
|
die
|
Stays the same. |
| Neuter |
das
|
das
|
Stays the same. |
| Plural |
die
|
die
|
Always 'die'. |
The 'Welcher' Trick
If you have two 'das' sounds together (e.g., 'Das Kind, das das Buch liest'), replace the first 'das' with 'welches' to sound more elegant and avoid repetition.
The Comma is Non-Negotiable
Think of the comma as a seatbelt for your relative clause. Without it, the whole sentence crashes. Always put it right before the relative pronoun.
Speaking vs. Writing
In spoken German, people sometimes use 'wo' as a universal relative pronoun in certain dialects, but for your B2 exam and professional life, always use the correct 'den/die/das' forms!
Verb Kick Practice
Imagine the relative pronoun is a soccer player who kicks the verb to the very end of the goal (the sentence). No exceptions!
उदाहरण
9Der Salat, den ich bestellt habe, schmeckt fantastisch.
Focus: den ich bestellt habe
The salad that I ordered tastes fantastic.
Salat is masculine, so 'der' becomes 'den' in the accusative.
Die E-Mail, die du geschrieben hast, war sehr höflich.
Focus: die du geschrieben hast
The email that you wrote was very polite.
Feminine nouns don't change their form in the accusative.
Alles, was ich sehe, gehört mir.
Focus: was ich sehe
Everything that I see belongs to me.
After 'alles', 'nichts', or 'etwas', we use 'was' instead of 'das'.
Das Schönste, das ich je gesehen habe, ist dieser Berg.
Focus: das ich je gesehen habe
The most beautiful thing I have ever seen is this mountain.
Relative pronouns can refer to superlatives used as nouns.
Der Vertrag, den Sie unterzeichnet haben, ist nun gültig.
Focus: den Sie unterzeichnet haben
The contract that you signed is now valid.
Common in business German when referencing documents.
✗ Der Film, der ich gestern sah... → ✓ Der Film, den ich gestern sah...
Focus: den
The movie I saw yesterday...
The film is the object of 'sehen', so it must be accusative 'den'.
✗ Das ist der Mann, den mich liebt. → ✓ Das ist der Mann, der mich liebt.
Focus: der
That is the man who loves me.
If the man is doing the loving, he is the subject (Nominative).
Die Kollegen, die ich um Hilfe gebeten habe, sind sehr nett.
Focus: die ich um Hilfe gebeten habe
The colleagues whom I asked for help are very nice.
Plural accusative is 'die'.
Ich kenne niemanden, den das Thema nicht interessiert.
Focus: den das Thema
I know nobody who isn't interested in the topic.
Using 'den' to refer back to 'niemanden' (masculine accusative).
खुद को परखो
Choose the correct relative pronoun for the masculine noun 'Kaffee'.
Der Kaffee, ___ ich gerade trinke, ist viel zu heiß.
Since 'ich' is the subject and 'trinken' needs an object, we use the masculine accusative 'den'.
Identify the relative pronoun for the plural noun 'Bücher'.
Die Bücher, ___ ich für die Uni brauche, liegen auf dem Tisch.
Plural relative pronouns in the accusative are always 'die'.
Complete the sentence with the neuter relative pronoun.
Das Auto, ___ mein Vater gekauft hat, ist sehr schnell.
Neuter nouns use 'das' in both nominative and accusative relative clauses.
🎉 स्कोर: /3
विज़ुअल लर्निंग टूल्स
Nominative vs. Accusative Relative Pronouns
How to Pick the Right Pronoun
Is the pronoun the subject of its clause?
Is the noun masculine?
Is it the direct object?
Real World Usage Scenarios
Job Interview
- • Die Projekte, die ich leitete...
- • Den Chef, den ich hatte...
Travel
- • Den Zug, den wir nahmen...
- • Das Hotel, das ich buchte...
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल
21 सवालCheck if the noun is the one doing the action or receiving it. If you say Ich sehe den Mann, the man is receiving the action, so use den.
No, German never allows 'omission' of the relative pronoun. You cannot say 'The man I see'; you must say Der Mann, den ich sehe.
Never. It always appears at the very beginning of the relative clause, right after the comma.
Both go to the end, and the conjugated verb (the modal) goes last. Example: Der Film, den ich sehen will.
It's just a fancy word for the noun in the main clause that the relative pronoun is describing. In Der Hund, den ich mag, Der Hund is the antecedent.
No. In the accusative, the plural relative pronoun is always die. The form denen is only for the Dative plural.
Yes! It often is. Example: Der Mann, den ich kenne, kommt aus Berlin. Notice the two commas!
The prefix and the verb stay together at the end. Example: Der Fernseher, den ich heute anmache.
No. Never use was for people. Only use der/die/das. Was is for things like alles or etwas.
Nope. Feminine die is like a rock; it stays the same in both Nominative and Accusative.
Yes. Peter, den ich gestern sah, ist mein Bruder. It provides extra non-essential information.
Exactly. Den is the German equivalent of 'whom', which we use for objects.
This is a rule for all subordinate clauses in German. Relative clauses are just one type of subordinate clause.
The reflexive pronoun stays near the subject. Example: Die Frau, die ich mir vorstelle.
Yes, welchen is a valid alternative for masculine accusative, but it sounds very formal or 'literary'.
No. Whether it is past, present, or future, the relative pronoun stays the same. Only the verb form at the end changes.
Mixing up Accusative den and Dative dem after verbs like helfen or danken. Always double-check your verb's case!
Technically as many as you want, but more than two will make you sound like a law textbook. Keep it readable!
If it refers to a neuter noun, it is always das with one 's'. Dass never refers to a noun.
Look at objects around your room and describe them. Der Stuhl, den ich gekauft habe... Das Buch, das ich lese....
Absolutely. It's a core requirement for both the writing and speaking parts. Mastering it will boost your score!
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