German Verbs With Sentence Examples
German verbs are easier to keep when each form is tied to a short sentence.
These guides explain how to use word lists, articles, verbs, and grammar notes without losing the main habit: read and hear useful sentences until the words become easy to use.
These pages use the reviewed German corpus and English meanings. Polish UI is active, while Polish, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, and Romanian corpus and page variants stay blocked until source-language review is complete.
German verbs are easier to keep when each form is tied to a short sentence.
Learn German nouns with their article from the beginning, then read them in context.
Prepositions such as in, auf, mit, and nach need sentence context because one-word translations are often misleading.
Travel words are easier to use when they appear with stations, tickets, routes, and time expressions.
Shopping vocabulary should connect nouns with buying, paying, asking, and quantities.
Why context, repetition, and sentence recall make vocabulary easier to keep.
Read guideA simple A1 study loop built around small groups of useful sentences.
Read guideThe beginner-friendly way to study common German verbs from a printable list.
Read guideHow to study German nouns with der, die, das, and plural forms from the beginning.
Read guideUse PDFs as maps, then turn the words into sentences before they fade.
Read guideWhy large word lists are useful references, not the best daily lesson.
Read guide