The V2 Rule: Where the Verb Always Stands
The Crime Scene
Most beginners learn German word order from English habits — and that is precisely where the trouble starts. In English, the verb sits comfortably after the subject. In a German Hauptsatz (main clause), however, the conjugated verb must always occupy position 2. Not third. Not first. Second.
It does not matter what stands in position 1. It can be the subject, a time expression, a place, an object, or even a whole phrase. Whatever sits there, the verb follows immediately behind it like a loyal shadow.
Exhibit A — The Position Map
| Pos. 1 | Pos. 2 (Verb) | Mittelfeld | End |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ich | trinke | jeden Morgen einen Kaffee | — |
| Jeden Morgen | trinke | ich einen Kaffee | — |
| Einen Kaffee | trinke | ich jeden Morgen | — |
| In Berlin | wohnt | meine Schwester seit drei Jahren | — |
Whatever you place in position 1, the conjugated verb takes position 2. The subject then jumps to position 3 — this swap is called Inversion, and we will return to it in Case File №4.
Exhibit B — The Witness Statements
Three sentences. Three different starting points. But the verb arbeitet never leaves position 2. That is the signature of the V2 rule — and once you see it, you cannot un-see it.
The Suspect
Suspect: The Conjugated Verb
Alias: Das finite Verb / die Personalform
Modus operandi: Always claims position 2 in a Hauptsatz, regardless of who or what stands in position 1.
Distinguishing features: Carries person and number (ich gehe, du gehst, er geht). Often travels alone — but, as we will discover in Case File №2, sometimes brings an accomplice.
Last seen: Slot 2 of every main clause in the German language.
Common Mistakes at the Crime Scene
✅ Heute gehe ich ins Kino.
✅ Mein Bruder und ich besuchen oft unsere Großeltern.
✅ Morgen fahren wir nach München.
Notice the pattern: the moment a learner places anything other than the subject in position 1, English instinct pushes the subject in front of the verb. German refuses. The verb’s seat is sacred.
One Phrase, One Slot
A common follow-up question: “What counts as one position?” The answer: a complete unit of meaning. A whole prepositional phrase, a whole time expression, a whole subordinate clause — each occupies position 1 as a single block.
Even though the bracketed material contains many words, it counts as a single position. The verb still lands in position 2.
Vocabulary from the Case
| Wort | Bedeutung |
|---|---|
| der Hauptsatz | main clause |
| die Verbstellung | verb position |
| die Personalform | conjugated/finite verb form |
| die Inversion | inversion (subject moves after verb) |
| das Mittelfeld | middle field of the sentence |
| das Vorfeld | pre-field (position 1) |
| finit | finite, conjugated |
| regelmäßig | regular |
| unverändert | unchanged |
| jeweils | respectively, in each case |
The Detective’s Closing Notes
— To be continued in Case File №2 —