Adjective Endings Expanded
Describe apartments, people and products more precisely with ein, kein and possessives.
In A1 you learned simple adjective endings after der, die and das. In A2, you need to describe real options more naturally: ein neuer Kurs, meine kleine Wohnung, keine guten Angebote. This chapter expands adjective endings after ein, kein, possessives and no article, with practical descriptions for housing, shopping and student life.
What this chapter covers
- I can use adjective endings after ein, eine and ein.
- I can describe nouns after kein and possessive words like mein and unsere.
- I can use plural adjective endings in phrases like gute Kurse and keine guten Angebote.
- I can recognise adjective endings in accusative and dative phrases.
- I can write short A2 descriptions of apartments, products, people and courses.
What you will practise in the app
The full chapter includes 10 interactive exercises covering these formats:
- Multiple choice questions
- Vocabulary matching
- Article selection (der / die / das)
- Fill-in-the-blank sentences
- Word order tasks
- Listening comprehension
- True or false statements
- Translation practice
- Guided writing task
Vocabulary: Describing People, Housing & Products
A small sample from this chapter's vocabulary set.
This is only a small sample. The full vocabulary set — with audio, example sentences, and grammar details — is available in the free app.
Grammar topics in this chapter
This chapter explains 3 grammar topics with plain-English explanations and structured exercises.
Adjectives after ein, kein and possessives
When the article does not show everything, the adjective helps show gender and case.
Plural adjectives and no article
Plural descriptions often use -e or -en depending on the word before the adjective.
Adjective endings in cases
Use the most important accusative and dative adjective chunks without drowning in a huge table.
Why this matters in Germany
This chapter helps you build German you can use in everyday situations in Germany — from understanding simple sentences to handling basic conversations, messages, appointments, study, work, and daily life. Practical language learned in context is easier to remember and use when it matters.
Practise the full chapter for free
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