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Learning German vocabulary by topic is more effective than random lists. When you learn food words together, family words together, and travel words together, the context reinforces meaning. Every word list includes the grammatical article (der/die/das), CEFR level, and an example sentence.
Food and eating vocabulary is among the most practical you can learn in German. Whether you are orde…
German work vocabulary is essential for anyone living in a German-speaking country or working with G…
Family vocabulary is one of the first things taught in German courses — and for good reason. These w…
Travel vocabulary is practical from day one if you visit German-speaking countries. Germany, Austria…
Colour vocabulary in German is mostly A1-level — simple, high-frequency, and useful immediately. The…
Numbers in German follow a learnable pattern, though they have one famous quirk: numbers from 21–99 …
German home vocabulary is practical for everyday life — whether you are renting an apartment (eine W…
German has three grammatical genders — masculine (der), feminine (die), and neuter (das) — and every noun belongs to one of them. Unlike in English, where nouns have no gender, German nouns carry their gender through four cases, changing article and adjective endings depending on the role the noun plays in the sentence.
The practical consequence: learn every German noun with its article as a single unit. Not just Tisch (table) but der Tisch. Not just Wahrheit (truth) but die Wahrheit. Butterfluent colour-codes noun genders automatically while you watch German videos — masculine in blue, feminine in pink, neuter in green — so you absorb genders in context rather than memorising rules in isolation.
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