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Is it der, die oder das Tante-Emma-Laden?

DER

The correct article in German of Tante-Emma-Laden is der. So it is der Tante-Emma-Laden! (nominative case)

The word Tante-Emma-Laden is masculine, therefore the correct article is der.

Finding the right gender of a noun

German articles are used similarly to the English articles,a and the. However, they are declined differently (change) according to the number, gender and case of their nouns.

In the German language, the gender and therefore article is fixed for each noun.

Test your knowledge!

Choose the correct article.

DER

DIE

DAS

The most difficult part of learning the German language is the articles (der, die, das) or rather the gender of each noun. The gender of each noun in German has no simple rule. In fact, it can even seem illogical. For example das Mädchen, a young girl is neutral while der Junge, a young boy is male.

It is a good idea to learn the correct article for each new word together - even if it means a lot of work. For example learning "der Hund" (the dog) rather than just Hund by itself. Fortunately, there are some rules about gender in German that make things a little easier. It might be even nicer if these rules didn't have exceptions - but you can't have everything! The best way to learn them is with the App - Der-Die-Das Train! (available for iOS and Android)

German nouns belong either to the gender masculine (male, standard gender) with the definite article der, to the feminine (feminine) with the definite article die, or to the neuter (neuter) with the definite article das.

  • for masculine: points of the compass, weather (Osten, Monsun, Sturm; however it is: das Gewitter), liquor/spirits (Wodka, Wein, Kognak), minerals, rocks (Marmor, Quarz, Granit, Diamant);

  • for feminine: ships and airplanes (die Deutschland, die Boeing; however it is: der Airbus), cigarette brands (Camel, Marlboro), many tree and plant species (Eiche, Pappel, Kiefer; aber: der Flieder), numbers (Eins, Million; however it is: das Dutzend), most inland rivers (Elbe, Oder, Donau; aber: der Rhein);

  • for neutrals: cafes, hotels, cinemas (das Mariott, das Cinemaxx), chemical elements (Helium, Arsen; however it is: der Schwefel, masculine elements have the suffix -stoff), letters, notes, languages and colors (das Orange, das A, das Englische), certain brand names for detergents and cleaning products (Ariel, Persil), continents, countries (die artikellosen: (das alte) Europa; however exceptions include: der Libanon, die Schweiz …).

German declension of Tante-Emma-Laden?

How does the declension of Tante-Emma-Laden 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 der Tante-Emma-Laden die Tante-Emma-Läden
Genitive des Tante-Emma-Ladens der Tante-Emma-Läden
Dative dem Tante-Emma-Laden den Tante-Emma-Läden
Akkusative den Tante-Emma-Laden die Tante-Emma-Läden

What is the meaning of Tante-Emma-Laden in German?

Tante-Emma-Laden is defined as:

[1] Small, old -fashioned shop with food, drinks and goods of daily needs

[1] kleines, altertümliches Ladengeschäft mit Lebensmitteln, Getränken und Waren des täglichen Bedarfs

How to use Tante-Emma-Laden in a sentence?

Example sentences in German using Tante-Emma-Laden with translations in English.

[1] „Sie teilten sich in Zweierpaare auf, Mutter und Sohn, Vater und Tochter, und kauften Proviant in ländlichen Tante-Emma-Läden.“

[1] "They divided themselves into pairs of two, mother and son, father and daughter, and bought provisions in rural corporation Emma shops"

How do you pronounce Tante-Emma-Laden?

Tante-Emma-Laden

Pictures or photos of Tante-Emma-Laden

[1] Tante-Emma-Laden in Bamberg
[1] Tante-Emma-Laden in Bamberg

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