A1 German Course | Lesson 27 | How to make negative sentences in German Language |Use of kein | Urdu

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To make negative sentences in German language, use of negative article "kein" or nicht in German is important to understand. Lesson 27 of A1 level of German language course for absolute beginners explains the use of negative article kein in German. There are 2 different ways for the negation in German language. One can use the negative article kein in German language or one can use nicht in German. Use of both kein and nicht in German language follows specific german grammar rules.
This lesson explains only the use of negative articles kein in German for negation in German language. Whenever we need to negate a noun in German language, the negation in German language is done by the use of negative article kein in German language. The use of nicht to negate in German language will be explained in the next lesson of A1 level of German language course for absolute beginners.
Since one way to negate in German is through the use of negative article kein in German language. Negative article kein in German like the positive article "der", "die", "das", have different endings and the Ending of negative article kein in German depends on 2 things.
1. The gender of noun in German language
2. The case in which the negative article is being used to negate the noun in German language.
Therefore the negative article kein in German language may have an additional "e", "en", "es" or "er", depending on whether the negative article kein is being used to negate masculine, feminine, or neuter noun in accusative, nominative or dative case in German language.
The 2nd way to negate either complete sentence or certain portion of sentence will be explained in the next lesson of A1 level of German language course for absolute beginners.
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How do you identify the nominative and accusative parts? I was confused, so checked these sentences on Chatgpt. in all these, the subject was Nominative case, while the phrase following the verb was Accusative case. For example "Ich brauche kein Auto"
Here
ich=> Nominative
Kein Auto => Accusative

But during the lecture, you pointed out the Nominative case for "kein Auto" and used the rules of the Nominative case.

I am confused about the "direct object" thing in a sentence. For me, all the sentences fall in a similar category. In all these sentences, we have a subject, a verb, an article kein, and a Noun at the end of the sentence. On the right half, we have an additional thing, an adjective.

Please respond to this query. Really confused.

AliRaza-kpmh
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sir ik bt clear ni hoi . apny khsa k hm noun ki nafi(negate) karen gy. lekin examples mein tu ap nette(nice) ki nafi kr rhy hn...?
kindly explain

muhammadkhurram
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Isn't "Schuhe" plural in example 3? I guess you mentioned it as feminine 8:25 .
shouldn't it be "Ich habe keine schwarzen schuhe".

SuperMehroze
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Sie hat keinen mantal, this sentence comes in a nominative case because it provides just information, no action is performed in this sentence so why do we use keinen, kindly guide please

sanaullah
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Sir example no 3 mai Schuhe plural case nhi hai? Single schuh feminine noun hai schuhe to plural hai na? Aur plural hony ki wajah se "schwarzen" nhi hona chahiye tha?

Faraaz.Writes
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shouldnt it be "Sie hat kein roter mantel"

hamzasanwar