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Forming feminine personal nouns in German

Part of GermanNouns, determiners and cases

Key points about feminine nouns

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  • Many that describe people have both and forms.

  • Jobs and nationalities are often gendered, eg Lehrermale teacher and Lehrerinfemale teacher.

  • The feminine form is usually formed by adding -in to the end of the masculine noun, but there are some exceptions.

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Check your understanding

What are the masculine nouns in German?

The following nouns describe people. Their feminine forms are created by adding -in, eg .

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Vocabulary table

To form feminine personal nouns:

  • If the masculine form ends in -er, add -in to the end of the word, add -in to the end of the word:

    • eg, der Italiener (Italian, m) becomes die Italienerin (Italian, f)
  • If the masculine form ends in -e, change the -e to -in:

    • eg, der Brite (British, m) becomes die Britin (British, f)
  • DeutscheGerman is the same for both masculine and feminine:

    • der Deutsche/ die Deutsche (German, m and f)
  • Some nouns change spelling slightly when forming the feminine:

    • eg, der Arzt (doctor, m) becomes die Ärztin (doctor, f)

Here are some examples of nationalities and job titles in German with their masculine and feminine forms:

MasculineFeminineEnglish
American
English
French
Greek
mechanic
actor
hairdresser
lawyer
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Quiz

Answer these questions on gendered nouns to test your understanding:

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