Structure de la phraseA1

Konjunktiounen

Coordinating and subordinating conjunctions

Objectif d'apprentissage

Can connect sentences using coordinating and subordinating conjunctions

Compétences pour l'examen:LiesenSchreiwen

Regardez ces exemples. Pouvez-vous repérer le schéma grammatical ?

Ech kommen, wann ech Zäit hunn.

I'll come when I have time.

Ech léiere Lëtzebuergesch, well ech hei wunnen.

I learn Luxembourgish because I live here.

Hien ass midd, awer hien schafft weider.

He is tired, but he keeps working.

Faites attention aux parties en surbrillance. Qu'ont-elles en commun ?

Koordinéierend (Wuertstellung ännert net):

KonjunktiounBedeitungBeispill
anandEch iessen an ech drénken.
awerbutEch wëll, awer ech kann net.
oderorKaffi oder Téi?

Subordinéierend (Verb geet un d'Enn):

wellbecauseEch bleiwen, well et reent.
wannwhen/ifEch kommen, wann ech kann.
dassthatEch mengen, dass et richteg ass.
Subordinating conjunctions send verb to end — like German. 🇬🇧 English speakers: English doesn't change word order after conjunctions. Verb-final in subclauses is new. 🇩🇪 German speakers: Identical: und→an, aber→awer, weil→well, wenn→wann, dass→dass.

Schémas d'erreurs fréquents

Verb not at end after subordinating conjunction

After well/wann/dass: verb goes to end of subclause

Ech kommen, wann ech Zäit hunn.

I'll come when I have time.

Wann (when/if) sends hunn to the end.

Ech léiere Lëtzebuergesch, well ech hei wunnen.

I learn Luxembourgish because I live here.

Well (because) sends the verb wunnen to the end of the subclause.

Hien ass midd, awer hien schafft weider.

He is tired, but he keeps working.

Awer (but) is coordinating — no word order change in second clause.

Pratiquer dans le cours

Appliquez cette grammaire dans les exercices du cours A1

A1 Cours
← Retour aux sujets