The Imperative

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What is the Imperative? (Imperativ)

  • We use the Imperative for demands and commands.
  • Someone is personally talking to one or more people.
  • The Imperative only exists in the "you" forms: „du“, „ihr“ and the formal „Sie“.

Examples:

  • Geh jetzt ins Bett!“   (du)
  • Geht bitte einkaufen!“   (ihr)
  • Gehen Sie nach Hause!“   (Sie)

Construction of the German Imperative

Formal Form („Sie“):

In the formal form, we construct the imperative with infinitive + Sie.

  • Gehen Sie nach Hause!"

Plural („ihr“):

In the plural form, we use the conjugated present tense of the verb (2nd person plural) without the pronoun.

  • Geht (ihr) nach Hause!"

Singular („du“):

In the singular form, we use the conjugated form (2nd person singular) without the ending and drop the pronoun.

  • Geh(st) (du) nach Hause!"

Irregularities in Singular:

The vowel change in Strong verbs  from "e" to "i/ie" is also done in the Imperative form. The vowel change from "a" to "ä" is not.

  • Hilf deinem Bruder!“   („du hilfst“)
  • Fahr langsamer!“   („du fährst“)

To sound more polite or speak more formally, we can add an "e" to the end of the verb.

  • Geh(e) nach Hause.“

If the verb stem ends in "-d" / "-t" or "-m" / "-n," we MUST add an "e" to the end.

  • Warte noch 5 Minuten!“

Recommendation: The Verb „sollen“

The Imperative is not the only variant that can be used to give commands. You can also give commands with the modal verb  „sollen“. To the lesson:  „sollen“.

Exceptions:

There are almost no irregular verbs in the German imperative form. These are the only exceptions:

Imperativ - imperative irregular

Word Order

The Imperative form is always in position 1. 

There is only a subject in the formal form ("Sie").

Imperativ word order imperative

Imperative of Separable Verbs

Separable verbs are also separated in the imperative form. The prefix goes to the end of the sentence.

  • Kommen Sie bitte mit!“   – mitkommen
  • Räumt euer Zimmer auf!“  – aufräumen
  • Hol deine Mutter ab!“   – abholen

Remember: Be Polite!

When spoken quickly and loudly, the imperative is always impolite and unfriendly!

The words „bitte“ or „bitte mal“ make the sentence more polite and friendlier.

  • Geh bitte mal in den Supermarkt.“
  • Hol mich bitte am Bahnhof ab.“

If you aren’t really mad at somebody, you always should use „bitte“ together with the imperative form. Without „bitte“ people will definitely perceive it as rude and unfriendly.

To express yourself even more politely, use the Konjunktiv 2:

  • Würdest du bitte mal in den Supermarkt gehen?“
  • Würdest du mich bitte am Bahnhof abholen?“

Related Topics:

Entire lesson in German only: Imperativ

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