Free German lessons 85 lessons · 14 scenes

Learn German

Crack German grammar through real conversation

German has a logical, almost mathematical grammar — four cases, three genders, and word-order rules that always work the same way. The trick is learning patterns in context rather than memorising tables. These free lessons walk you through everyday German with native voices, showing der/die/das in action, separable verbs (aufstehen, einkaufen) coming apart, and the polite Sie versus the informal du.

Yaya Magicat Shelladonna Muri Pishi
All three genders (der, die, das) in context
Separable verbs shown coming apart
Polite Sie and casual du distinguished clearly
Modal verbs (können, müssen, dürfen) with examples
Compound nouns demystified

All German lessons 85 lessons across 14 scenes

Bakery

6 lessons

Beach

6 lessons

Cafe

6 lessons

Clothes

9 lessons

Farm

4 lessons

Hospital

5 lessons

House

10 lessons

Office

4 lessons

School

7 lessons

Sports

5 lessons

Street

6 lessons

Supermarket

6 lessons

Townhall

5 lessons

Zoo

6 lessons

Common questions about learning German

Quick answers for new German learners.

How do I learn German gender (der/die/das)?

Always learn the article with the noun — say 'der Tisch', never just 'Tisch'. There are patterns (endings in -ung, -heit, -keit are die; -chen is das) but exceptions exist. Practice with real sentences beats memorising rules.

Are German cases as hard as people say?

Four cases (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive) sounds intimidating, but the changes are mainly to the article (der → den → dem → des). Once you've heard them in sentences a few hundred times, they become automatic.

What are separable verbs in German?

Verbs with a prefix that detaches in conjugated forms: aufstehen → ich stehe auf ('I get up'). The prefix flies to the end of the clause. Common ones: aufstehen, einkaufen, anrufen, ausgehen.

Is German easier than French?

Different hard. German pronunciation is consistent (you say what you read); French is famously inconsistent. But German cases are tougher than French. Most English speakers find German vocabulary easier (shared Germanic roots: Apfel, Wasser, Haus).