Passive With Modal Verbs • Grammaire De L'Allemand • Chatterbug

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Declension 11 grammar topics Dative Case 6 grammar topics Accusative Case 4 grammar topics Genitive Case 2 grammar topics Verbs & Conjugation 22 grammar topics Pronouns 12 grammar topics Adjectives and Adverbs 7 grammar topics Nouns and Articles 9 grammar topics Prepositions 4 grammar topics Useful Words and Phrases 25 grammar topics German Grammar Explained / Passive with modal verbs Share this article with others: The email was sent, the report written, and the contract signed today. Who did those things? We don't know, because these are passive sentences. We seem to put more emphasis on the actions instead. When those actions involve a modal verb (should, can, must), then nothing really gets too complicated. The email should be sent, the report must be written, the contract can be signed today. German is quite similar here, remember we don't use the auxiliary "to be" but werden instead. Die E-Mail soll heute geschickt werden.Der Bericht muss heute geschrieben werden. Der Vertrag kann heute unterschrieben werden.Tadaaa!Grammar why's In German, all infinitives go at the end of the sentence. werden here is the infinitive. Meanwhile, the main verb is the modal verb. How do you know? Because it's the only conjugated verb (also called finite verb or the one with the funny endings). Finite verbs go in second position right after the subject. What?? Passive sentences do have a subject after all? Yes, the subject of every passive sentence is the direct object of the active sentence. There is an inversion: I write the report. (direct object)The report is written (by me). (subject) And that leaves us with the participle ("ge-verb") which goes just before the infinitive and should never ever be separated from its buddy, the auxiliary "werden". Formula: Subject + Finite verb + all other information + participle + "werden" (Eine E-Mail mussheutegeschriebenwerden) = a great passive sentence with a modal verb! Signup to study more! Previous grammar topic: Passive Present Next grammar topic: Passive in the preterite ©2024 Chatterbug Inc [email protected] Learn with German Media Learn German Grammar Blog Help

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