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Relative Pronouns in Nominative
Relative pronouns connect ideas by acting as subjects in sub-clauses, requiring mandatory commas and end-of-sentence verb placement.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Relative pronouns link a noun to a describing sub-clause.
- The pronoun matches the noun's gender and number precisely.
- Nominative case means the pronoun is the subject in the sub-clause.
- The conjugated verb always moves to the very end of the clause.
Quick Reference
| Gender/Number | Relative Pronoun | Function | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine |
der
|
Subject (Singular) | Der Mann, der... |
| Feminine |
die
|
Subject (Singular) | Die Frau, die... |
| Neuter |
das
|
Subject (Singular) | Das Kind, das... |
| Plural |
die
|
Subject (Plural) | Die Leute, die... |
| Formal (M) | welcher | Subject (High level) | Der Bericht, welcher... |
| Formal (F) | welche | Subject (High level) | Die Analyse, welche... |
Exemplos-chave
3 de 8Der Kollege, der immer zu spät kommt, hat heute verschlafen.
The colleague who always comes late overslept today.
Das Auto, das vor der Tür steht, gehört meinem Bruder.
The car that is standing in front of the door belongs to my brother.
Alles, was du sagst, ist wahr.
Everything that you say is true.
The Comma Sandwich
If your relative clause is in the middle of a sentence, it needs a comma before AND after it. Think of it like a sandwich—without both slices of bread, the filling (your info) falls out!
No 'That' Skipping
In English, we say 'The man I know.' In German, you MUST say 'Der Mann, den ich kenne.' Never drop the pronoun, or your sentence will collapse like a poorly made souffle.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Relative pronouns link a noun to a describing sub-clause.
- The pronoun matches the noun's gender and number precisely.
- Nominative case means the pronoun is the subject in the sub-clause.
- The conjugated verb always moves to the very end of the clause.
Overview
Relative clauses are like the secret sauce of German fluency. At the B2 level, you aren't just surviving; you're expressing complex thoughts. Imagine you're at a crowded party in Berlin. You want to point out the person who brought the amazing vegan lasagna. Instead of saying, "There is a man. He brought lasagna," you want one smooth flow. Relative pronouns in the Nominative case allow you to do exactly that. They act as a bridge between two ideas. They take a noun and immediately give it a backstory or a description. In the Nominative case specifically, the pronoun acts as the subject of its own little mini-sentence (the relative clause). It’s the hero of its own story. Think of it like a grammar traffic light that tells the listener, "Wait, I'm adding more info about that noun right now!" It makes you sound sophisticated, clear, and—most importantly—natural.
How This Grammar Works
A relative clause is what we call a Nebensatz (subordinate clause). This is the most important thing to remember. In a Nebensatz, the conjugated verb loves to travel. It doesn't stay in the second position; it packs its bags and moves to the very end of the clause. The relative pronoun itself always starts the clause and sits right after a comma. Yes, in German, commas are mandatory. You can’t just skip them like you sometimes do in English. The pronoun’s job is to represent the noun from the main clause (the antecedent). It matches that noun's gender (masculine, feminine, or neuter) and number (singular or plural). Since we are focusing on the Nominative today, the pronoun’s case is determined by its role as the subject within that relative clause. If it's the one doing the action in that small part of the sentence, it's Nominative. It’s like a grammar ghost: it looks like an article but behaves like a subject.
Formation Pattern
- 1Creating these clauses is a step-by-step process. Think of it like building a LEGO set.
- 2Find the noun you want to describe in your main sentence.
- 3Determine its gender:
der(masculine),die(feminine),das(neuter), ordie(plural). - 4Place a comma immediately after that noun (or at the end of the main thought).
- 5Pick the matching Nominative relative pronoun. (Spoiler: they look exactly like the definite articles!)
- 6Start your relative clause with that pronoun.
- 7Add your details, but keep the verb for last.
- 8Place the conjugated verb at the very end of the relative clause.
- 9If your main sentence continues, add another comma after the verb and keep going.
- 10Here’s a quick mental check: Masculine =
der, Feminine =die, Neuter =das, Plural =die. Yes, even at B2, we still love these four!
When To Use It
You’ll use this constantly in real life. If you’re at a Bürgeramt (registry office) and need to describe the clerk who helped you, you’ll say: "Der Beamte, der mir geholfen hat..." It’s also vital for defining things when you forget the actual word. "Das Ding, das man zum Aufmachen von Flaschen benutzt" (The thing that one uses to open bottles). It’s a lifesaver when your vocabulary fails you. In professional settings, it helps you provide detail without sounding like a toddler. "Die Strategie, die wir verfolgen, ist sehr effektiv." It adds weight and precision to your arguments. Use it when you want to be specific, when you’re telling a story, or when you’re describing a person’s characteristics in a job interview. It’s the difference between "I have a car. It is fast" and "I have a car that is fast."
When Not To Use It
Don't go overboard. If you can use a simple adjective, do it. "Der rote Apfel" is usually better than "Der Apfel, der rot ist." Relative clauses are for adding *extra* or *complex* information, not just for basic colors or sizes. Also, avoid "stacking" them. If you have three relative clauses in one sentence, your listener will need a GPS to find the end of the thought. "Der Mann, der den Hund hat, der die Katze jagt, die..." Stop right there! That’s a grammar nightmare. Also, if the pronoun isn't the subject of the description, you’ll need a different case (like Accusative or Dative). If you aren't sure who is doing what, keep the sentence simple until you’re confident. Grammar should be a tool, not a trap.
Common Mistakes
The number one mistake? Putting the verb in the wrong place. Native speakers will still understand you, but their brains will do a little hiccup. The verb *must* go to the end. Another classic is forgetting the comma. German grammar is very strict about this; think of the comma as the glue that holds the two clauses together. Many English speakers also try to omit the pronoun (like saying "The book I read"). In German, this is a total no-go. You *must* include the das. "Das Buch, das ich lese." Also, watch out for the plural. Many learners use die correctly but then forget to conjugate the verb for the plural at the end. "Die Kinder, die dort spielt" is wrong; it must be spielen. It's like a matching game where all the pieces have to fit perfectly.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
You might come across the pronoun welcher (welche, welches). It sounds very fancy and a bit old-fashioned. You’ll see it in newspapers or legal documents to avoid repeating der/die/das too many times. In everyday conversation, though, welcher sounds like you’re reading from a 19th-century novel. Another point of confusion is was. You only use was as a relative pronoun after specific words like alles, etwas, nichts, or a superlative (e.g., "Das Beste, was ich je gesehen habe"). For standard nouns, stick to the der/die/das family. Finally, don't confuse relative pronouns with conjunctions like dass. Dass introduces a fact, while a relative pronoun refers back to a specific noun. One is a statement; the other is a description.
Quick FAQ
Q. Is the relative pronoun always the same as the article?
A. In the Nominative, yes! It’s one of the few times German is kind to us.
Q. Can a relative clause start a sentence?
A. Usually, it follows the noun it describes, but in some poetic or advanced cases, it can appear differently. Stick to the standard order for now.
Q. What if the noun is at the end of the sentence?
A. Then the relative clause just follows it to the end. "Ich sehe den Hund, der bellt."
Q. Do I need a comma after the relative clause verb?
A. Only if the main sentence continues. If the relative clause ends the whole sentence, just use a period.
Reference Table
| Gender/Number | Relative Pronoun | Function | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine |
der
|
Subject (Singular) | Der Mann, der... |
| Feminine |
die
|
Subject (Singular) | Die Frau, die... |
| Neuter |
das
|
Subject (Singular) | Das Kind, das... |
| Plural |
die
|
Subject (Plural) | Die Leute, die... |
| Formal (M) | welcher | Subject (High level) | Der Bericht, welcher... |
| Formal (F) | welche | Subject (High level) | Die Analyse, welche... |
The Comma Sandwich
If your relative clause is in the middle of a sentence, it needs a comma before AND after it. Think of it like a sandwich—without both slices of bread, the filling (your info) falls out!
No 'That' Skipping
In English, we say 'The man I know.' In German, you MUST say 'Der Mann, den ich kenne.' Never drop the pronoun, or your sentence will collapse like a poorly made souffle.
The 'Was' Exception
Use 'was' whenever the thing you're referring to isn't a specific noun. Words like 'etwas' (something) or 'nichts' (nothing) always trigger 'was'. It makes you sound very B2!
Formal 'Welcher'
If you hear someone using 'welcher' in a casual bar, they're probably a lawyer or trying to be funny. Stick to 'der/die/das' for friends, but use 'welcher' in your master's thesis.
Exemplos
8Der Kollege, der immer zu spät kommt, hat heute verschlafen.
Focus: der immer zu spät kommt
The colleague who always comes late overslept today.
Standard nominative usage where 'der' is the subject of 'kommt'.
Das Auto, das vor der Tür steht, gehört meinem Bruder.
Focus: das vor der Tür steht
The car that is standing in front of the door belongs to my brother.
The relative clause describes the specific car.
Alles, was du sagst, ist wahr.
Focus: was du sagst
Everything that you say is true.
Use 'was' instead of 'das' after 'alles'.
Das ist das Schönste, was ich je gesehen habe.
Focus: was ich je gesehen habe
That is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen.
Superlatives take 'was' as the relative pronoun.
Die Firma, welche die Software entwickelt hat, ist insolvent.
Focus: welche die Software entwickelt hat
The company which developed the software is insolvent.
'Welche' is a formal alternative to 'die'.
✗ Die Frau die dort steht ist meine Mutter. → ✓ Die Frau, die dort steht, ist meine Mutter.
Focus: die dort steht
The woman who stands there is my mother.
Never forget the commas surrounding the relative clause.
✗ Der Hund, der bellt laut, nervt mich. → ✓ Der Hund, der laut bellt, nervt mich.
Focus: der laut bellt
The dog that barks loudly annoys me.
The verb 'bellt' must go to the end of the clause.
Meine Freunde, die in Berlin wohnen, besuchen mich bald.
Focus: die in Berlin wohnen
My friends, who live in Berlin, are visiting me soon.
Plural agreement: 'die' matches 'Freunde', and 'wohnen' is plural.
Teste-se
Choose the correct relative pronoun for the subject of the sub-clause.
Dort steht der Lehrer, ___ uns Chemie beibringt.
'Lehrer' is masculine, and he is the subject of 'beibringt' (he teaches us).
Identify the correct relative pronoun for a plural noun.
Die Bücher, ___ auf dem Tisch liegen, sind sehr alt.
'Bücher' is plural, so the relative pronoun must be 'die'.
Select the correct form for a neuter noun.
Das Mädchen, ___ dort singt, ist meine Schwester.
'Mädchen' is grammatically neuter, so we must use 'das'.
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Recursos visuais
Article vs. Relative Pronoun
Choosing Your Pronoun
Is the noun Masculine?
Is it the Subject of the clause?
Result: Use 'der'
Nominative Pronouns by Category
Singular
- • der (maskulin)
- • die (feminin)
- • das (neutral)
Plural
- • die (alle Geschlechter)
Perguntas frequentes
20 perguntasThey allow you to combine two sentences into one elegant thought. Instead of repetitive short sentences, you create a sophisticated flow like Der Mann, der dort wartet, ist mein Chef.
Yes, always! A relative clause is a subordinate clause (Nebensatz), so the conjugated verb must move to the very final position, like in die Frau, die Deutsch lernt.
In the Nominative case, they are identical in form (der, die, das, die). However, their function is different; the pronoun refers back to a noun while the article introduces one.
Yes, welcher is a synonym, but it is much more formal. You will mostly find it in literature or official reports to avoid using the same article twice in a row.
You must put another comma after the verb of the relative clause. For example: Das Buch, das dort liegt, gehört mir.
Use die as the relative pronoun and make sure the verb at the end of the clause is conjugated for the plural, as in Die Kinder, die draußen spielen...
Use was after indefinite pronouns like alles, nichts, etwas, viel, or after a neuter superlative like das Beste or das Einzige.
Ask yourself: is the pronoun the subject of the action in the relative clause? If the pronoun is the one 'doing' the verb, it is Nominative.
In German, the comma is legally required (grammatically speaking). Skipping it is a major error, unlike in English where it depends on the type of clause.
Yes, in that case, you use was. For example: Er kam zu spät, was mich sehr ärgerte. (He came late, which annoyed me.)
Absolutely. They must match the gender of the noun they are describing: der for masculine, die for feminine, and das for neuter.
Yes, because Mädchen is grammatically neuter. You must say Das Mädchen, das dort singt... even though she is a person.
Der refers back to a specific noun, while wer is used for general statements about people without a specific antecedent, like Wer rastet, der rostet.
Grammatically, no, but stylistically, yes. More than two in a row makes your sentence very hard for a native speaker to follow.
No, the relative pronoun always initiates the relative clause and sits directly after the comma.
If there's a preposition, it comes before the relative pronoun (e.g., mit dem), but that would change the case to Dative or Accusative, not Nominative.
It provides variety. If you have a sentence like Der Mann, der der Frau hilft..., using welcher helps avoid the triple der/der/der sound.
Die is used for feminine singular nouns AND all plural nouns, regardless of their original gender.
German doesn't distinguish between defining and non-defining clauses with commas like English does; all relative clauses get commas regardless of how essential the info is.
Try to describe objects in your room using only one sentence. Das ist die Lampe, die sehr hell leuchtet. It's a great daily exercise!
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