Again with the ist es

E813Wed, 23 Jul 2008 02:25:29 -0500
I have the same question Ken did earlier about lesson 2.1 regarding the ist es etc. The explanation he got still left me cofused. It really seems to me that "heute ist es geschlossen" is a question, not a statement. I know word order is different than English, but this seems different than what I heard throughout the first lesson. Thanks alot
NathalieThu, 24 Jul 2008 10:31:48 -0500
Hi there,
the sentence "Heute ist es geschlossen" puts emphasis on the fact that it is closed "today". If you left out the "today" it would have to be "Es ist geschlossen" in order to be a statement, "Ist es geschlossen" would be a question. If you raise your voice at the end of the sentence "Heute ist es geschlossen" it could be a question as well, however it would sound more natural to say "Ist es heute geschlossen?"
I know it's a bit tricky to get your head around the word order, but I hope it makes sense?
Let me know if you want some more examples.
By the way, the sequel to Rocket German - More Rocket German - includes a grammar section on word order that might be interesting for you.

trunkaffe91Fri, 18 Sep 2009 03:43:57 -0500
Nathalie - In the lesson where Nik & Paul go out to eat, she orders the pasta dish and says "Das nehme ich". Is this the same concept; the verb comes first (before the pronoun), but since the emphasis is on Das - that, the sentance is a statement? If you have any other examples, that would be great. thanks
Paul WeberFri, 18 Sep 2009 04:09:58 -0500
Hi there,

Paul here.
Yes exactly, you got it.
When you want to emphasize something you use the same word order as a question, but you don't raise your voice at the end of it to make it sound like a statement.
Here are some examples. Imagine you are a little child staying with your grandma. She has trouble hearing so you have to speak loud and clear. She asks you what you want to do. You haven't had anything to eat all day, so you say "Ich möchte etwas essen". "I would like something to eat". She couldn't hear you, so you say it again "Ich möchte essen". This time she heard that you want something, but she still didn't understand what you want, so she ask "Was möchtest du"? "What do you want"? - You say (in a very polite voice - remember she is your grandma) "Essen möchte ich".
And as quick as lightning she disappears in the kitchen to make you a delicious sandwich.
The stress is on the word "essen" therefore it comes first.

Does that make it clearer?

Here are some more:

Ich finde das Museum interessant. (You are in a museum and say to your travel partner that you enjoy the museum and find it interesting)

Das Museum finde ich interessant ( you are at the tourist information centre and want to decide what to do that day - you emphazise that it is the museum that you are interested in)


Mir gefällt das Kleid - I like the dress
Das Kleid gefällt mir - It is the dress (not the trousers) that I like

Let me know if you need more help
trunkaffe91Sun, 20 Sep 2009 10:45:46 -0500
Paul - This is perfect! Thanks for the examples!

-Will
Total posts 14727 • Total topics 3503 • Total members 19058 • Our newest member anne b8

Try Rocket German for Free

Sign up for your Free, No-obligation Trial
and see how well Rocket German works for you!
No Credit Card Required

YES! I want to try Rocket German for free!



This is a private and fully protected mailing list. You can unsubscribe at any time.
You can review our Privacy Policy here.

That's right, sign up now and you'll be able to see just how well my Rocket German Premium course works for you!

Your free trial gives you instant online access to a selection of Rocket German Premium interactive audio lessons and German language and culture lessons.

You'll be amazed at how much German you know after just a few days!

4.5 out of 5

"Rocket Languages is
our Editors' Choice for
language-learning"

PC MAG

Yours sincerely,

Paul Weber

Paul Weber
Rocket German

05-24-12 As seen in The New York Times, PC Mag Editors' Choice, Trust Guard - Security Verified, Better Business Bureau, 60 Day - Money back Guarantee Better Business Bureau Trust Guard - Security Verified
Libros Media Ltd - Copyright 2004-2012 | support@rocketlanguages.com
USA: 8721 Santa Monica Blvd #1229, Los Angeles, CA 90069-4057, USA | Phone: +1-310-862-1460
Asia/Pacific: 2-1008 Ferry Road, Woolston, Christchurch 8023, New Zealand | Phone: +64-3-384-6350