What makes a noun Nominative Case?

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What makes a noun Nominative Case? Nominativ – der Werfall It is the subject of a sentence It may also come in the predicate after a form of the verb sein (to be) – bin, bist, ist, sind, seid / war, warst, waren, wart) Note: may also appear after the verb werden (to become)

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Nominativ – der Werfall. What makes a noun Nominative Case?. It is the subject of a sentence. It may also come in the predicate after a form of the verb sein (to be) – bin, bist , ist , sind , seid / war, warst , waren , wart ) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of What makes a noun Nominative Case?

Page 1: What makes a noun Nominative Case?

What makes a noun Nominative Case?

Nominativ – der Werfall

• It is the subject of a sentence

• It may also come in the predicate after a form of the verb sein (to be) – bin, bist, ist, sind, seid / war, warst, waren, wart)Note: may also appear after the verb werden (to become)

Page 2: What makes a noun Nominative Case?

1) Die Blume ist schön.

2) Das ist mein Auto.

3) Der Junge wird ein Mann.

4) Die Frau ist meine Lehrerin.

5) Der alte Mann zieht eine Jacke an.

Die Blume – subject of the sentence

Auto – predicate nominative (comes after ist)

The boy becomes a Man. – Man is predicate nominative

Lehrerin – predicate nominative (comes after ist)

Mann – is the subject of the sentence.

Nominativ – Beispiele

Werden has a double meaning – to become and it is also used to form the future tense.