German nouns - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nounsGerman nouns have a grammatical gender, as in many related Indo-European languages. They can be masculine, feminine, or neuter: even words for objects without (obvious) masculine or feminine characteristics like 'bridge' or 'rock' can be masculine or feminine. German nouns are also declined (change form) depending on their grammatical case (their function in a sentence) and whether they are singular or plural. German has four cases, nominative, accusative, dative and genitive.
Nouns and articles / Grammar - deutsch.info
deutsch.info › grammar › nounsGerman nouns are either: masculine (the man), feminine (the street), or neuter (the hotel). An article or pronoun indicates the gender of a noun. The article belongs to the noun. The indefinite article is used when the noun is named for the first time. The indefinite article can also mean the number 1. No indefinite article is used in the plural.
Plural Nouns in German Grammar - Lingolia
deutsch.lingolia.com › en › grammarGerman plurals are formed by adding -n/-en, -e, -r/-er, -s. Some nouns are the same in their singular and plural forms e.g. die Löffel whilst others are mostly used in the singular e.g. die Milch or plural form e.g. die Eltern. The ending of a nouns give us a clue as to which plural ending to use. Below is a summary of word endings and their ...
Grammatik: die Substantiven (oder: Nomen)
www.dartmouth.edu › ~deutsch › GrammatikAs noted above, when expressing a measurement as an adjective, English often states the metric in the singular: a 15-foot ladder, etc. German does something similar when the metric is a masculine or neuter noun: zwei Glas Bier (two glasses of beer), drei Pfund Kartoffeln (three pounds of potatoes), zwei Stück Kuchen (two pieces of cake), zehn Sack Zement (ten sacks of cement), zwei Paar ...