|
When thinking about relative pronouns, we need to find the word, which determines the gender and the number of the relative pronoun. The declination is determined by the relative clause. Let's have a look at some examples to make it clearer.
Examples if the relative pronoun is direct object
a1) The man, that you see here, is a friend of my father.
a1) Der Mann, den du
da siehst, ist ein Freund meines Vaters.
b1) The men, that you see here, are friends of my father.
b1) Die Männer, die
du da siehst, sind Freunde meines Vaters.
c1) The woman, that you see here, is a friend of my
father.
c) Die Frau, die du
da siehst, ist eine Freundin meines Vaters.
d1) The women, that you see here, are friends of my
mother.
d1) Die Frauen, die
du da siehst, sind Freundinnen meiner Mutter.
Explication
|
a1)
The phrase a) is compound of two phrases |
|
|
Der Mann ist ein Freund
meines Vaters.
Du siehst ihn da. |
|
|
These two phrases are combined by a relative
pronoun |
|
|
Der Mann,
den du
da siehst, ist ein Freund meines Vaters. |
|
|
Now we have to understand that the relative pronoun
is den and no der,
die or any other word. To determine the gender
and the number we have to know to what the relative
pronoun refers and in this case it is der
Mann, which is third person singular masculine.
To know the declination we have to know which function
the relative pronoun has in this relative clause. In
this case it is a direct object. Here it is asked Whom
do you see? When we now remember what was said
in the chapter about The
declination in German we know that the Accusative of the third person singular in masculine is den.
|
b1)
The phrase b) is compound of two phrases |
|
|
Die Männer sind Freunde
meines Vaters.
Du siehst sie da. |
|
|
If we put them together we get: |
|
|
Die Männer,
die du
da siehst, sind Freunde meines Vaters.
|
|
|
Basically there is no difference between this phrase and
the phrase before. The only thing that has changed is
the number, because now we have various men. The Accusative of the third person plural of the relative pronoun is
die.
|
c1)
This phrase is compound of two phrases: |
|
|
Die Frau ist eine Freundin
meines Vaters.
Du siehst sie da. |
|
|
If we put them together we get: |
|
|
Die Frau,
die du
da siehst, ist eine Freundin meines Vaters.
|
|
|
Now the relative pronoun refers to die
Frau, which is evidently the third person singular
feminine. The phrase has else not changed at all, the
relative pronoun has the role of the direct object and
therefore it is die.
|
d1) This phrase is a combination
of two phrases: |
|
|
Die Frauen sind Freundinnen
meiner Mutter.
Du siehst sie da. |
|
|
And now we combine them to: |
|
|
Die Frauen, die du
da siehst, sind Freundinnen meiner Mutters.
|
|
|
The only thing that has changed is the number, which is
now plural. According to that what we have learnt in the
chapter The
declination in German the relative pronoun is die.
Examples with indirect object:
a2) The man, to whom I have given the car, is a friend of
my father.
a2) Der Mann, dem ich das Auto geschenkt habe, ist ein
Freund meines Vaters.
b2) The men, whom I have given the car, are friends of
my father.
b2) Die Männer, denen ich das Auto geschenkt habe, sind
Freunde meines Vaters.
c2) The woman, whom I have given the car, is a friend
of my father.
c2) Die Frau, der ich das Auto geschenkt habe, ist eine
Freundin meines Vaters.
d2) The women, whom I have given the car, are friends
of my father.
d2) Die Frauen, denen ich das Auto geschenkt habe, sind
Freundinnen meines Vaters.
Explication
|
a2)
This phrase is a combination of two phrases: |
|
|
Der Mann ist ein Freund
meines Vaters.
Ich habe ihm ein Auto geschenkt. |
|
|
If we combine them with a relative pronoun
we get: |
|
|
Der Mann, dem
ich ein Auto geschenkt habe, ist ein Freund
meines Vaters. |
|
|
The main phrase is the same like in the examples with
the direct object. What has changed is the relative clause,
because now the relative pronoun substitutes an indirect
object (ihm). The gender
and the number (third person singular, masculine) have not
changed. The only thing that has changed is the declination
of the relative clause. Therefore it is now dem
not den.
More examples
The
relative pronoun refers to the subject of
the main clause |
|
Das Kind, |
das |
ein
Buch liest, heißt Andrea. |
|
relative pronoun in Nominative |
|
Das Kind, |
das |
ich sehe,
heißt Andrea. |
|
relative pronoun in Accusative (direct object) |
|
Das Kind, |
dem |
ich eine Birne geschenkt
habe, heißt Andrea. |
|
relative pronoun in
Dative (indirect object) |
|
Das Kind, |
dessen |
Mutter ich kenne,
heißt Andrea. |
|
relative pronoun in
Genitive. |
The
relative pronoun refers to the Dative-Object
(indirect object) of the main phrase |
|
Er hat dem Kind, |
das |
ein Buch liest,
einen Apfel geschenkt. |
|
relative pronoun in Nominative |
|
Er hat dem Kind, |
das |
ich sehe,
einen Apfel geschenkt. |
|
relative pronoun in Accusative (direct object) |
|
Er hat dem Kind, |
dem |
ich schon eine
Birne geschenkt habe, einen Apfel geschenkt. |
|
relative pronoun in Dative (indirect object) |
|
Er hat dem Kind, |
dessen |
Mutter ich kenne,
einen Apfel geschenkt. |
|
relative pronoun in
Genitive |
The
relative pronoun refers to the Accusative -object
(direct object) of the main phrase |
|
Ich sehe das Kind, |
das |
ein Buch liest. |
|
relative pronoun in Nominative |
|
Ich sehe das Kind, |
das |
ich sehe. |
|
relative pronoun in Accusative (direct object) |
|
Ich sehe das Kind, |
dem |
ich eine Birne
geschenkt habe. |
|
relative pronoun in Dative (indirect object) |
|
Ich sehe das Kind, |
dessen |
Mutter ich kenne. |
|
relative pronoun in
Genitive |
The
relative pronoun refers tot the Genitive-object
of the main phrase |
|
Das ist der Pullover des Kindes, |
das |
ein Buch liest.
|
|
relative pronoun in Nominative |
|
Das ist der Pullover des Kindes, |
das |
ich sehe. |
|
relative pronoun in Accusative (direct object) |
|
Das ist der Pullover des Kindes, |
dem |
ich eine Birne
geschenkt habe. |
|
relative pronoun in Dative (indirect object) |
|
Das ist der Pullover des Kindes, |
dessen |
Mutter ich kenne.
|
|
relative pronoun in
Genitive |
|
As we have shown with these examples, for the relative
pronoun it does not have any importance in which declination
the referred object is. The declination of the relative
pronoun is only determined by the relative phrase. Concerning
the gender and number the relative pronoun is determined
by the object (subject) that it refers to. The relative
clauses are the same independent on the declination of
|