German reference tables — bookmarkable grammar at a glance
Seven grammar tables. Each one covers a complete set of forms — articles, pronouns, verbs, prepositions, adjective endings. Bookmark the page you keep forgetting, return when you need it.
Three ways to use these tables
Quick lookup
Forgot whether mit takes Dativ? Can't remember the Akkusativ form of der? Bookmark the page, open it in 3 seconds.
Study companion
Each table page links to the matching grammar guide. Read the explanation, study the table, then practice in the app — one focused session per topic.
Exam prep
Before a Goethe-Zertifikat or citizenship exam, scan the tables you're unsure about. Each page includes an FAQ with the most commonly tested questions.
Frequently asked questions
Yes — each table covers the full set of forms you will encounter at A1–B1 level. Articles covers all 4 cases for definite and indefinite forms; irregular verbs covers principal parts for all common strong verbs; prepositions covers all 28 Akkusativ, Dativ, two-way, and Genitiv prepositions. The tables are reference material, not excerpts.
Start with articles (der/die/das). Understanding how articles change across the 4 cases unlocks every other table: pronouns follow the same pattern, prepositions make sense only when you know which case they demand, and adjective endings depend on what the article already shows. Articles is the root.
Not all at once. At A1, focus on Nominativ (subject) and Akkusativ (direct object) — these cover 70% of sentences. Add Dativ at A2 when you learn prepositions. Genitiv appears mostly in formal writing and can wait until B1. The tables show all 4 so you have the full picture, but sequence your memorization by level.
Yes — bookmark the page and your browser will cache it. On mobile, use "Add to Home Screen" for one-tap access. The tables are purely static: no login required, no dynamic content, no network calls after the first load.
All levels from A1 to B1. Articles, pronouns, and verb conjugation are essential from day one (A1). Prepositions and modal verbs become important at A2. Adjective endings are primarily B1 content. Each table page shows its primary level, but all tables are useful as reference at any stage.