Show Menu
Cheatography

german ib Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

german cheat sheet just grammar stuff on nature

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

PASSIVE VOICE IN GERMAN

Present tense: In the present tense, the passive voice is formed by using the present tense of "­wer­den­" and the past participle of the main verb. For example, "Der Hund beißt den Mann" (The dog bites the man) becomes "Der Mann wird vom Hund gebiss­en" (The man is bitten by the dog).
Past tense: In the past tense, the passive voice is formed by using the past tense of "­wer­den­" and the past participle of the main verb. For example, "Der Mann hat den Hund gebiss­en" (The man has bitten the dog) becomes "Der Hund wurde vom Mann gebiss­en" (The dog was bitten by the man).
Future tense: In the future tense, the passive voice is formed by using the future tense of "­wer­den­" and the past participle of the main verb. For example, "Der Mann wird den Hund beißen­" (The man will bite the dog) becomes "Der Hund wird vom Mann gebissen werden­" (The dog will be bitten by the man).
Perfect tense: In the perfect tense, the passive voice is formed by using the present tense of "­wer­den­" and the past participle of "­hab­en" or "­sei­n", depending on the main verb. For example, "Der Mann hat den Hund gebiss­en" (The man has bitten the dog) becomes "Der Hund ist vom Mann gebissen worden­" (The dog has been bitten by the man).
In German, the passive voice is formed by using the auxiliary verb "­wer­den­" (to become) along with the past participle of the main verb. The subject of the sentence is the receiver of the action, rather than the doer of the action.
 

Geogra­phical names

WOHIN
WO
WOHER
nach Deutsc­hland
in
aus
in die Schweiz
in der
aus der
in die USA
in des
aus den
-
articles are always used with rivers, seas, lakes, mountains, oceans
Rivers
european rivers are usually feminine. non-Eu­ropean rivers are usually masculine, like der Nil, der Gangas
except for a few like der Rhein, der Main, der Neckar
seas, lakes
because a lake (der See) is masculine, all lakes are masculine. like der Bodensee.
seas/o­ceans are feminine words and neutral words(die See, das Meer), so names will either be fem or neu: die Ostsee, das Schwarze Meer
- Mountains always masculine:
der Mont Blanc
Mountain chains always in plural:
die Alpen
countries don't have articles UNLESS:
An article is used if the name has an attribute, for example an adjective, in front of it
→ das wilde Afrika, das schöne Finnland
in these cases, the city, continent or country is a neuter word (article das)
2. Feminine countries (die article)
→ have to be learned by heart
→ for example: die Schweiz, die Slowakei, die Türkei, die Ukraine
3. Countries in plural
→ die USA
→ die Nieder­lande
 

VOCABULARY

aus/brehen
erupt
beben
quake/­tremble
blasen
to blow(s­trong wind)
brennen
burn
das Abgas, e
the exhaust (gas)
das Abwasser
the sewage
das Erdbeben
the earthquake
das Gewitter
the thunder
das Hochwasser
the floodwater
das Klima
the climeate
das Opfer
the victim
der Erdrutsch, -e
ther landslide
der Klimaw­andel
the climate change
der Orkan, -e / der Wirbel­sturm, -e+
the hurricane
der Sturm, -e+
the storm
der Treibh­aus­effekt, -e
the greenhouse effect
der Tsunami, -s
the tsunami
der Unfall, -e+
the accident
der Vulkan­aus­bruch, -e+
the volcanic eruption
der Waldbrand, -e+
the forest fire
der Wind, -e
the wind
die Atomka­tas­trope, -n
the atomic catast­rophe
die Dürre, -n
the drought
die Emission, -en
the emission
die Erosion
the erosion
die Flut, -en
the flood
die Hitzew­elle, -n
the heatwave
die Klimae­rwä­rmung / die Erderw­ärmung
the global warmin­g/c­limate warming
die Lawine, -s
the avalanche
die Naturk­ata­str­ophe, -n
the natural catast­rophe
die Ölpest
the oil spill
die Schlam­mla­wine,-n
the mudslide
die Seuche, -n
the plague
die Übersc­hwe­mmung, -en
the flooding
die Umwelt­kat­ast­rophe, -n
the enviro­nmental disaster
drohen + dat
to threathen
evakuieren
evacuate
überfl­uten, übersc­hwemmen
to flood
überleben
survive
um/kommen
to perish
verurs­achen
cause
wehen
blow
zerstören
destroy
gewittern
to thunde­rstorm
stürmen
to storm
abwech­slu­ngs­reich
varying
bergig
mounta­inous
das Feld, -er
the field
das Gebirge, -
the mountain range
das Gelände
the terrain
das Gewässer, -
the waterbody
das Tal, -er+
the valley
das Ufer, -
the waterline
der Archipel, -e
the archip­elago
der Bach, -e+
the stream
der Berg, -e
the mountain
der Dschungel, -
the jungle
der Felsen, -
the cliff
der Fjäll, -s
the fell
der Fluss, -e+
the river
der Gipfel,
the peak
der Gletscher, -
the glacier
der Hügel, -
the hill
der Laubwald, -er+
the deciduous tree
der Nadelwald, -er+
the coniferous tree
der Ozean, -e
the ocean
Der Regenwald, -er+
the rainforest
der See, -n
the lake
der Strand, -e+
the beach
der Strom, -e+
the stream
der Sumpf, -e+
the swamp
der Teich, -e
the pond
der Wald, -er+
the forest
der Wasser­fall, -e+
the waterfall
dicht
dense
die Ebbe, -n
the low tide
die Ebene, -n
the plain
die Erde
the earth, globe
die Flut, -en
the high tide, flood
die Gegend, -en
the region
die Halbinsel, -n
the headland
die Insel, -n
the island
die Küste, -n
the coast
die Landsc­haft, -en
the landscape
die Natur
the nature
die See / das Meer, -e
the sea
die Stroms­chn­elle, -n
the rapid
die Umgebung, -en
the surrou­ndings
die Wiese, -n
the meadow
die Wildnis, -se
the wilderness
die Wüste, -n
the desert
feucht
moist
flach
flat
fließen, fließt, floss, ist geflossen
to flow
hoch
high
öde
deserted
steil
steep
strömen
stream
tief
deep