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German Articles

How to identify grammatical gender in German?

By: Ulrike Carlson Thu Jun 05 2025
German
Articles, Nouns

The most reliable way to identify the gender of a noun in German is to look at the article it is used with. Unfortunately, unlike other languages, the ending of the noun itself usually won’t be enough, so you’ll need to look at the surrounding context.

German nouns can come in three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Notice how the form of the article depends on the gender of the noun.

masculine article

der Mann

the man

Mann is masculine
feminine article

die Frau

the woman

Frau is feminine
neuter article

das Kind

the child

Kind is neuter

In this post, we’ll introduce the concept of grammatical gender in German and teach you some tricks for identifying a noun’s gender. Let’s have a look!

Table of Contents

    What is gender in German?

    In German, all nouns fall into one of three groups: masculine, feminine, or neuter. We refer to the category a noun belongs to as its grammatical gender.

    These categories might sound familiar from English pronouns like “he” (masculine), “she” (feminine), or “it” (neuter). In English, we use “he” for males, “she” for females, and “it” for non-living things.

    In German, though, things are a little more arbitrary.

    • In some cases, males are masculine while females are feminine:

      masculine article

      der Sohn

      the son

      male and masculine
      feminine article

      die Tochter

      the daughter

      female and feminine

      In German, there are a few categories of words where grammatical gender does generally pattern with the real-world sex or gender of the individual they refer to:

      • Names → “Mike” is masculine; “Lucy” is feminine

      • Kinship terms → der Sohn(the son), die Tochter(the daughter)

      • Professions → der Lehrer(the male teacher), die Lehrerin(the female teacher)

    • But some nouns for living beings (even humans) that are clearly male or female will be grammatically neuter instead.

      neuter article

      das Mädchen

      the girl

      female and neuter
    • Additionally, there are many nouns for non-living things or ideas that are grammatically masculine or feminine.

      masculine article

      der Apfel

      the apple

      non-living and masculine
      feminine article

      die Pizza

      the pizza

      non-living and feminine

    So in German a girl is an “it,” an apple is a “he” and a pizza is a “she”?!? Actually, this is pretty typical grammatical gender in the world’s languages. You’ll see similar patterns in Spanish, French, Russian, and more.

    At its heart, a noun’s grammatical gender is just a grammatical pattern it follows. Knowing a noun’s gender will tell you which articles to use, what forms of adjectives to use, etc.

    We talk about nouns in terms of their “gender” only because nouns for males default to masculine while nouns for females default to feminine. This does not mean that other nouns can’t be in the “masculine” or “feminine” buckets, nor does it mean that all nouns for males or females pattern this way.

    If we need to name those patterns we could just as well rename masculine, feminine, and neuter nouns der, die, and das nouns or even apple, pizza and ice cream nouns — whatever helps you remember the pattern!

    How to identify the gender of a German noun?

    When you “meet” a new German noun, the best way to identify its gender is to look at the surrounding words. Often articles, adjectives, or other modifying words will reflect the noun’s gender.

    • der + noun = masculine

    • die + noun = feminine

    • das + noun = neuter

    Unfortunately, unlike some other languages, there aren’t many noun endings in German that you can rely on to tell you the gender of a noun. Though there are a few endings that can give you a hint, a lot of nouns won’t have one of these endings, so you can’t rely on them being there.

    The best way to memorize the gender of a German noun is to always learn nouns along with the definite article . So, don’t just put Flasche(bottle) on your flash cards, put die Flasche.

    There are, however, a couple of tricks to remember. Though these won’t help you with all German nouns, they will help you with some of them!

    Trick 1: Look at the ending of the noun

    Though not all German nouns have endings that will help you identify their grammatical gender, there are a few endings to be on the lookout for:

    Masculine Endings
    Feminine Endings
    Neuter Endings

    -ant, -är, -ast, -en, -ent, -el, -er, -eur, -ich, -ig, -ismus, -ist, -ling, -or, -us

    -a, -ade, -anz, -e, -ei, -enz, -heit, -ie, -in, -ik, -ion, -ität, -keit, -schaft, -sis, -ung, -ur

    -chen (diminutive), -ett, -eau, -icht, -il, -lein (diminutive), -ma, -ment, -nis, -tel, -tum, -um

    der Boden(the floor)der Motor(the engine)
    die Mannschaft(the team)die Frisur(the hairstyle)
    das Häuschen(the little house)das Ergebnis(the result)

    For some more example words, check out this list of the endings of German words that will help you identify the gender along with examples and exceptions!

    ⤷TIP
    Now you understand why Mädchen(girl) takes the neuter article das, even though it describes a female person: all words ending in -chen are neuter, regardless of biological sex!

    Trick 2: Look at the meaning of the noun

    The meaning of the noun often tells you which article you need to choose. We saw that some of them are related to biological sex, but there are other meaning categories too!

    Masculine Endings
    Feminine Endings
    Neuter Endings

    ALL nouns in
    these categories

    • men’s job titles

    • male kin

    • days of the week

    • months

    • seasons

    • cardinal directions

    • car brands

    • women’s job titles

    • female kin

    • numbers

    • motorcycle brands

    • ship names

    • colors

    • languages

    • letters of the alphabet

    • geographical names with adjectives

    • hotel names

    • verbs used as nouns

    MOST nouns in
    these categories

    • weather phenomena

    • mountains

    • planets

    • currencies

    • fruits

    • flowers

    • words of English origin

    • young people or animals

    • country names

    • chemical elements

    • fractions

    Important

    Trick 1 nearly always overrides Trick 2. For example, das Erdbeerchen(the small strawberry) is neuter because Erdbeerchen ends in -chen (tip 1), even though fruits are usually feminine (tip 2).

    Can German nouns have more than one gender?

    Some German nouns can be used as though they belong to more than one gender (i.e. they can be used with two or even three different articles).

    With a few nouns, a different gender goes with a different meaning. For example:

    Masculine
    Feminine
    Neuter

    der See

    the lake

    die See

    the sea

    der Leiter

    the leader

    die Leiter

    the ladder

    der Kiefer

    the jawbone

    die Kiefer

    the pine

    der Schild

    the shield

    das Schild

    the sign

    der Band

    the volume (book)

    die Band

    the band (music)

    das Band

    the ribbon

    Some other nouns may belong to different genders in different dialects of German. For example:

    Dialect

    Masculine

    der Joghurt

    Germany

    Feminine

    die Joghurt

    Viennese

    Neuter

    das Joghurt

    Austria & Switzerland

    the yogurt

    There has also been a year-long debate among Germans whether the nation’s favorite cocoa hazelnut spread should be called der, die, or das Nutella. And we still haven’t come to an agreement!

    What is the gender of compound nouns in German?

    You might be wondering about how we can predict the grammatical gender of compound nouns like Fußballnationalmannschaft(national football team).

    This time, there’s a rule that applies to 100% of all German words! Let’s look at some examples to see if you can derive the rule yourselves:

    • die Ehe

      the marriage

      der Mann

      the man

      =

      der Ehemann

      the husband

    • das Kind

      the child

      der Garten

      the garden

      =

      der Kindergarten

      the kindergarten

    • der Tisch

      the table

      das Bien

      the leg

      =

      das Tischbein

      the table leg

    As you can see, it’s always the very last noun of the compound that determines the gender. Did you get it right?

    And now you know that we say die Fußballnationalmannschaft because we say die Mannschaft (remember, all nouns ending in -schaft are feminine!)

    Summing up

    Let’s summarize what you’ve learned about gender and the definite articles so far:

    • Do not confuse grammatical gender with biological sex! They don’t usually match in German.

    • You can often tell the grammatical gender of a noun from its shape or its meaning, but in many cases, you should simply learn the article along with the noun.

    • The gender of compound nouns is always determined by the gender of the last word.

    Are you ready to practice what we just saw? Try out these exercises to practice German noun gender! Or, to review, you can check out our German noun gender study sheet!

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