PronominenA1

Perséinlech Pronominen

Personal pronouns in nominative case

Objectif d'apprentissage

Can use personal pronouns to refer to people and things

Compétences pour l'examen:LauschterenLiesenSchreiwenSchwätzen

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

Ech sinn aus Lëtzebuerg.

I am from Luxembourg.

Hatt ass ee Meedchen.

She is a girl.

Dir sidd vu Paräis?

Are you from Paris? (formal)

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

D'perséinlech Pronominen am Nominativ:

PersounSingularPlural
1. Persounechmir
2. Persoun (informell)dudir
3. Persounhien (m) / si (f) / hatt (n)si
2. Persoun (formell)Dir (ëmmer grouss!)

Wichteg: Hatt gëtt fir Saachen an och fir Mënschen (neutral) benotzt: D'Meedchen — hatt. Dir (groussgeschriwwen) ass déi formell Form fir eng oder méi Persounen.

Learners confuse hien/si/hatt and forget that hatt is used for neuter nouns including Meedchen (girl). 🇬🇧 English speakers: English has no grammatical gender for "it" vs "he/she" distinction based on noun gender.

Schémas d'erreurs fréquents

Using si instead of hatt for neuter nouns

Neuter nouns (Meedchen, Kand) use hatt, not si

Using du instead of Dir in formal contexts

Dir (capitalized) is for formal address; du for friends and family

Ech sinn aus Lëtzebuerg.

I am from Luxembourg.

Ech (I) — always lowercase unless at start of sentence, like German ich.

Hatt ass ee Meedchen.

She is a girl.

Hatt is used for neuter nouns. Meedchen is neuter (like German Mädchen), so hatt not si.

Dir sidd vu Paräis?

Are you from Paris? (formal)

Dir (formal you) is always capitalized and uses the 2nd person plural verb form.

Pratiquer dans le cours

Appliquez cette grammaire dans les exercices du cours A1

A1 Cours
← Retour aux sujets