Is it der, die or das Schulbank?
DIE
Schulbank
The correct article in German of Schulbank is die. So it is die Schulbank! (nominative case)
The word Schulbank is feminine, therefore the correct article is die.
German declension of Schulbank?
How does the declension of Schulbank work in the nominative, accusative, dative and genitive cases? Here you can find all forms in the singular as well as in the plural:
1 | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | die Schulbank | die Schulbänke |
Genitive | der Schulbank | der Schulbänke |
Dative | der Schulbank | den Schulbänken |
Akkusative | die Schulbank | die Schulbänke |
What is the meaning of Schulbank in German?
Schulbank is defined as:
[1] Seat furniture for two students in classrooms, in which the seating is firmly connected to the writing plate
[1] Sitzmöbel für zwei Schüler in Klassenräumen, bei dem die Sitzgelegenheit fest mit der Schreibplatte verbunden istHow to use Schulbank in a sentence?
Example sentences in German using Schulbank with translations in English.
[1] „Viele Klassenräume in Kamerun sind mit Schulbänken ausgestattet, die am Boden fixiert sind.“
[1] "Many classrooms in Cameroon are equipped with school benches that fixed on the ground"[1] „Sobald er den Raum betrat, mussten alle Schüler links neben die Schulbank treten und strammstehen.“
[1] "As soon as he entered the room, all students had to step on the left next to the school desk and stand up" "[1] „Ich gehe gern in die Schule, und die Vorstellung, dass ich nie wieder mit meinen Mitschülerinnen in der Schulbank sitzen darf, treibt mir die Tränen in die Augen.“
[1] "I like to go to school, and the idea that I can never sit with my classmates in the school desk again, drives my tears into the eye"[1] „Elsas Vater wurde dem Volkssturm zugeteilt, und in der Schule lernten sie jetzt, unter den Schulbänken Schutz zu suchen, Wassereimerketten zu bilden und Sirenensignale zu unterscheiden.“
[1] "Elsa's father was assigned to the Volkssturm, and at school they now learned to search for protection under the school benches, to form water egg notes and to differentiate between siren signals"