🇩🇪 German

German Adjective Endings

German adjective endings are one of the most dreaded topics for learners. Three declension patterns, four cases, three genders, and plural forms — that sounds like a lot of memorization. But there is a unifying principle that makes it manageable: the gender and case signal must appear somewhere, either on the article or on the adjective. Once you understand this rule, the patterns make sense.

🌐

Learn from Your Home Screen

Lingo puts new words on your Home Screen with pronunciation and translations — so you learn 30 languages without even opening the app.

Download on the App Store

The Core Principle

Every German noun phrase needs to signal its gender and case. If a definite article (der, die, das) is present, it already carries that signal, so the adjective can relax with simple endings (-e or -en). If no article is present, the adjective must carry the signal itself with stronger endings. The indefinite article (ein, eine) falls in between.

Pro Tip

Think of it as a relay race. Someone has to carry the baton (the gender/case signal). If the article carries it, the adjective rests. If there is no article, the adjective runs with it.

Weak Declension: After Definite Articles

After der, die, das, dieser, jeder, welcher, and their case forms, adjectives use only two endings: -e and -en.

CaseMasculineFeminineNeuterPlural
Nominativder gute Manndie gute Fraudas gute Kinddie guten Leute
Akkusativden guten Manndie gute Fraudas gute Kinddie guten Leute
Dativdem guten Mannder guten Fraudem guten Kindden guten Leuten
Genitivdes guten Mannesder guten Fraudes guten Kindesder guten Leute

The pattern: -e appears in nominative (all genders) and accusative (feminine and neuter). -en appears everywhere else. That is five slots with -e and eleven with -en.

GermanEnglish
Pronunciation
der gute Mannthe good man (nom)
dehr GOO-teh mahn
die gute Frauthe good woman (nom)
dee GOO-teh frow
den guten Mannthe good man (acc)
dehn GOO-ten mahn
dem guten Kindthe good child (dat)
dehm GOO-ten kint

Practice These Words in Lingo Widget

Home screen widgets, daily vocabulary, and 30 languages to explore.

Download on the App Store

Mixed Declension: After Indefinite Articles

After ein, eine, kein, mein, dein, sein, ihr, unser, euer, the adjective sometimes needs to pick up the slack because ein does not distinguish masculine from neuter in nominative.

CaseMasculineFeminineNeuter
Nominativein guter Manneine gute Frauein gutes Kind
Akkusativeinen guten Manneine gute Frauein gutes Kind
Dativeinem guten Manneiner guten Fraueinem guten Kind
Genitiveines guten Manneseiner guten Fraueines guten Kindes

Notice: in nominative masculine (ein guter) and nominative/accusative neuter (ein gutes), the adjective takes a strong ending because ein alone does not reveal the gender. Everywhere else, the article already shows gender/case, so the adjective falls back to -e or -en.

Pro Tip

The three key spots where mixed declension differs from weak: nominative masculine (-er), nominative neuter (-es), and accusative neuter (-es). In all other positions, the endings are identical to the weak pattern (-e or -en).

Strong Declension: No Article

When no article is present (common with uncountable nouns and plurals without articles), the adjective must carry the full gender/case signal.

CaseMasculineFeminineNeuterPlural
Nominativguter Weingute Milchgutes Biergute Leute
Akkusativguten Weingute Milchgutes Biergute Leute
Dativgutem Weinguter Milchgutem Bierguten Leuten
Genitivguten Weinesguter Milchguten Bieresguter Leute

These endings look familiar — they mirror the endings of the definite articles themselves (der, die, das, dem, den). The adjective is doing the article's job.

Common Mistake

You will most often encounter strong declension with food and drink (guter Wein, kaltes Wasser, frische Milch) and plurals without articles (alte Freunde, neue Bücher). Practice with these common examples and the pattern becomes natural.

A Simplified Strategy

  1. Is there a definite article? Use -e or -en (weak). Default to -en; use -e only for nominative singular and accusative feminine/neuter.
  2. Is there ein/kein/mein? Same as weak, EXCEPT: nominative masculine gets -er, nominative/accusative neuter gets -es.
  3. No article? The adjective ending mirrors what the definite article would have been.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do German adjective endings change?

German adjective endings change to show the gender, case, and number of the noun they describe. The ending depends on what comes before the adjective — a definite article (der/die/das), an indefinite article (ein/eine), or no article at all. The article and adjective work together to signal grammatical information.

What is the weak declension?

Weak declension (after definite articles like der, die, das, diese, jede) is the simplest pattern. The adjective ending is either -e or -en. Use -e for nominative singular (all genders) and accusative feminine/neuter. Use -en everywhere else. This covers most everyday situations.

What is the strong declension?

Strong declension occurs when there is no article before the adjective. The adjective itself must carry the gender/case signal that the article would normally provide: -er (masc nom), -es (neut nom/acc), -e (fem nom/acc), -em (masc/neut dat), -en (genitive and dative fem, all plurals). Think of it as the adjective doing the article's job.

What is the mixed declension?

Mixed declension occurs after indefinite articles (ein, eine, kein, mein, dein, etc.). It blends weak and strong patterns. Where the article clearly shows gender (eine = feminine, einem = dative), the adjective takes the weak -e or -en. Where the article is ambiguous (ein = could be masc or neut), the adjective takes the strong ending to clarify.

Do I really need to memorize all the endings?

Rather than memorizing full tables, learn the core principle: the gender/case signal must appear somewhere. If the article shows it clearly (der, die, das, dem, den), the adjective relaxes to -e or -en. If the article is vague or absent, the adjective picks up the signal. Most native speakers internalize this through exposure, and learners can too.