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Lesson 1 - Statements, Verben, Conjugations

Lesson 2: Unusual Verbs

Lesson 3: Introduction to Articles and Nouns in German

Lesson 4: Modal Verbs

Lesson 5: Verbs with Prefixes

Lesson 6: Imperativ

Lesson 7: Ja-/Nein-Fragen

Lesson 8: W-Fragen

Lesson 9: der, die, das, die (Review)

Lesson 10: er, sie, es, sie

Lesson 11: ein, eine, ein, -

Lesson 12: kein, keine, kein, keine

Lesson 13: Possessivartikel

Lesson 14: Verbs in the Simple Past Tense

Lesson 15: The Cases in German: Nominativ

Lesson 16: The Cases in German: Akkusativ

Lesson 17: The Cases in German: Dativ

Lesson 18: Personalpronomen and Possessivpronomen in the Three Cases

Lesson 19: Prepositions in the Nominativ and Akkusativ

Lesson 20: Prepositions in the Dativ

Lesson 21: Wechselpräpositionen

Lesson 22: Verbs in Present and Future Tenses

Lesson 23: Verbs in the Perfekt

Lesson 24: The Adjective Endings in the Nominativ

Lesson 25: The Adjective Endings in Akkusativ und Dativ

Episode #10

Lesson 10: er, sie, es, sie

10.1 Substituting Pronouns for Names to Provide Variety

If we were to use someone's name over and over again in a text, it would get old pretty quickly. That's where pronouns come in. They refer back to the same person and because the context is clear, they provide some nice variety in a text.

Let's use this set of names and pronouns for this lesson:

Person or thingGerman PronounEnglish pronoun
Johannerhe
Giselasieshe
das Gericht (the court)esit
Viele Leser (many readers, plural)sie (plural)they

And now let's try it out. Here are sentences from previous lessons with t

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