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C1-Grammer

Detective Guide Sprachbausteine 1/5

Reading Time: 8 minutes
German Tadka · Detective Series II
Case File №1 · Sprachbausteine for telc C1

The Three-Second Scan: Reading the Gap

In which Detective Tadka teaches you to look at a Sprachbausteine gap and instantly know what kind of suspect you are hunting — before you ever look at the four options.
“The amateur reads all four options first,” said the Detective, lighting his pipe. “He compares them, second-guesses himself, and burns three minutes on a one-point question. The professional looks at the gap first — at what comes before it and after it — and already knows what part of speech he is looking for. The four options are not the question. The gap is the question. The options are merely the lineup.”

The Crime Scene: What Sprachbausteine Actually Tests

Before we hunt, we must know our quarry. The telc C1 Sprachbausteine consists of 22 multiple-choice gaps embedded in a single connected text of about 350–400 words. Four options per gap. One point each. Twenty minutes (shared with Leseverstehen). Ten percent of your total score.

The 22 gaps are not random. Across every official telc C1 paper, the gaps fall into a predictable distribution of suspect types:

Suspect TypeTypical FrequencyWhat it Tests
Konnektoren / Adverbien5–6 gapslogical relationship between clauses
Präpositionen (mit Kasus)3–4 gapsfixed prep + verb/noun pairs
Adjektivendungen / Partizipien3–4 gapsweak / mixed / strong declension
Verbformen (Konj. II, Passiv)2–3 gapstense, mood, voice
Funktionsverbgefüge2–3 gapsfixed noun-verb collocations
Feste Wendungen / Idiomatik2–3 gapsidioms, set phrases
Pronomen / Relativsätze1–2 gapsreference, agreement
“Recognise the suspect type first. Solve the case second.”

The Three-Second Scan

Every gap deserves three seconds of looking before you read the options. In those three seconds, you ask yourself three questions in order:

1What word stands immediately before the gap? Article? Preposition? Verb? Comma? Sentence-start? This single word usually decides the entire case.
2What word stands immediately after the gap? Noun? Verb at the end? Comma? Punctuation? This pins down the structure.
3What is the verb position in the surrounding clause? Position 2 → main clause. Verb at the end → subordinate clause. This determines which connector family is even allowed.
The Gap-Reading Reflex
Before reading the four options, train yourself to mentally classify the gap as one of seven suspect types listed above. If your scan returns “I don’t know what this gap wants,” you have not earned the right to look at the options yet. Re-read the sentence. The gap will tell you what it wants — but only if you ask it before you ask the options.

Five Worked Scans

Let me show you what a professional sees. In each example, I will scan the gap before looking at the options.

Scan 1 — The Comma Tells All

Die Regierung versprach Reformen, _____ die Bevölkerung blieb skeptisch. The government promised reforms, _____ the population remained sceptical.

Before the gap: a comma. After the gap: a noun phrase + finite verb in position 2. Verdict: we need a coordinating connector that takes position 0 (does not push the verb back). The contrast between “promised” and “remained sceptical” tells me this is an adversative connector. I am looking for aber, doch, jedochnot obwohl (which would force the verb to the end), not trotzdem (which would invert the subject).

a) obwohl b) doch c) trotzdem d) während

Scan 2 — The Naked Article

Trotz der _____ Kritik hielt der Minister an seinem Plan fest. Despite the _____ criticism, the minister stuck to his plan.

Before the gap: der (a definite article in Genitiv after trotz). After the gap: the feminine noun Kritik. Verdict: this is an adjective declension gap. After a definite article in Genitiv feminine → weak declension → the ending must be -en. I do not even need to know the meaning. I am looking for any adjective ending in -en.

Scan 3 — The Lonely Verb

Der Vorschlag wurde von allen Mitgliedern _____ und sofort umgesetzt. The proposal was _____ by all members and immediately implemented.

Before the gap: wurde von allen Mitgliedern. Verdict: Vorgangspassiv with wurde + dangling end position. The gap demands a Partizip II. I do not yet know which Partizip II — but I know any option that is not a past participle is dead.

Scan 4 — The Position-1 Trap

_____ er die Bedingungen akzeptiert, kann der Vertrag unterschrieben werden. _____ he accepts the conditions, the contract can be signed.

Before the gap: nothing — sentence start. After the gap: a subject + finite verb at the end of the first clause + comma + finite verb in position 1 of the second clause. Verdict: the verb-final structure of the first clause and the verb-first structure of the second clause both scream subordinate clause introducing a main clause. I am hunting a subordinator: sofern, falls, wenn, sobald. I am not hunting aber or denn.

Scan 5 — The Article + Noun Combo

Das Unternehmen stellte den neuen Mitarbeiter _____ Probe ein. The company hired the new employee _____ a trial basis.

Before the gap: a verb. After the gap: the noun Probe. Verdict: this is a fixed prepositional phrase — auf Probe (on a trial basis). No declension to worry about, no grammar to check. This is pure idiom recognition. Either you know the phrase or you guess.

The Four Question-Types You Must Recognise on Sight

Every Sprachbausteine gap belongs to one of four broad families. Train your eye to label the gap within three seconds. Below, each family is shown with a real-looking mini-gap so you can recognise the shape on the page — not just the description.

1 · Grammatical gaps

The grammar around the gap forces a specific form. You do not need to know what the sentence means — you need to identify case, gender, tense, or mood, and apply the rule.

Looks like — solved:

  1. Der ___ Bericht wurde gestern veröffentlicht.
    Der neue Bericht wurde gestern veröffentlicht.
    Logic: definite article der + masculine noun Bericht in Nominativ → weak declension → adjective ending -e. Any C1-level adjective works (neue, kürzlich erschienene, lang erwartete) — the only thing the gap tests is the -e ending.
  2. Das Projekt ___ vom Vorstand genehmigt.
    Das Projekt wurde vom Vorstand genehmigt.
    Logic: Partizip II “genehmigt” at clause-end + agent introduced by “vom” = textbook Vorgangspassiv. The gap is the passive auxiliary in Präteritum: wurde. Present tense wird would also fit grammatically, but wurde is the standard exam choice.
  3. Wenn ich das früher gewusst ___, wäre ich gekommen.
    Wenn ich das früher gewusst hätte, wäre ich gekommen.
    Logic: main clause “wäre … gekommen” = Konjunktiv II Vergangenheit. The wenn-clause must mirror that tense. “wissen” takes haben as auxiliary → Konjunktiv form: hätte.

You hunt: adjective endings, participles, auxiliary verbs, modal forms, relative pronouns, case markers.

2 · Logical gaps

The gap sits between two ideas and must express the relationship between them — contrast, cause, time, concession. The grammar is usually fine either way; meaning decides.

Looks like — solved:

  1. Das Meeting wurde verschoben, ___ der Chef krank war.
    Das Meeting wurde verschoben, weil der Chef krank war.
    Logic: the second clause gives the reason for the first. Verb “war” is at the end → subordinate clause → subordinating conjunction. Causal meaning → weil (or da).
  2. ___ der schlechten Bewertungen blieb das Restaurant beliebt.
    Trotz der schlechten Bewertungen blieb das Restaurant beliebt.
    Logic: bad reviews vs. still popular = concession. The gap takes a Genitiv noun phrase (“der schlechten Bewertungen”) → preposition with Genitiv. Concessive preposition + Genitiv → trotz.
  3. Sie hat fleißig gelernt, ___ ist sie durchgefallen.
    Sie hat fleißig gelernt, trotzdem ist sie durchgefallen.
    Logic: studied hard but still failed = contrast. Position 1 of the second clause (verb “ist” in position 2) → we need an adverb, not a conjunction. Adversative adverb → trotzdem (or dennoch).

You hunt: connectors (weil, obwohl, trotzdem, dennoch), prepositions of contrast/cause (trotz, wegen), temporal adverbs (seitdem, bevor).

3 · Lexical gaps

A specific verb, noun, or adjective demands a specific partner — usually a preposition. The combination is fixed; logic will not help you, only the collocation.

Looks like — solved:

  1. Viele Studenten leiden ___ Prüfungsstress.
    Viele Studenten leiden unter Prüfungsstress.
    Logic: the verb leiden always pairs with unter + Dativ. No other preposition works. Pure collocation memory.
  2. Die Firma ist stolz ___ ihre Mitarbeiter.
    Die Firma ist stolz auf ihre Mitarbeiter.
    Logic: the adjective stolz always takes auf + Akkusativ (confirmed by “ihre” being Akkusativ Plural). The case marking on “ihre” is itself a clue — only auf and a few others trigger Akkusativ here.
  3. Wir warten seit Stunden ___ den Bus.
    Wir warten seit Stunden auf den Bus.
    Logic: warten takes auf + Akkusativ. “den Bus” is masculine Akkusativ — confirms the case the preposition triggers.

You hunt: verb-preposition pairs (sich freuen auf, denken an, bestehen aus), adjective-preposition pairs (abhängig von, bekannt für), noun-preposition pairs (Interesse an, Grund für).

4 · Idiomatic gaps

The gap completes a fixed phrase, Funktionsverbgefüge, or set expression where the individual words give you no signal. You either know the phrase or you do not.

Looks like — solved:

  1. Wir möchten den Vorschlag ___ Frage stellen.
    Wir möchten den Vorschlag in Frage stellen.
    Logic: “in Frage stellen” = “to call into question / to question”. Fixed Funktionsverbgefüge — no logic, just memory. Note: no article before “Frage”, which is the FVG signature.
  2. Die Entscheidung wurde ___ Kraft gesetzt.
    Die Entscheidung wurde in Kraft gesetzt.
    Logic: “in Kraft setzen / treten” = “to enact / come into force” (legal/administrative idiom). Recognise it from the bare noun “Kraft” + verb “setzen” — that combination is the fingerprint of this FVG.
  3. Ich kann das beim ___ Willen nicht akzeptieren.
    Ich kann das beim besten Willen nicht akzeptieren.
    Logic: “beim besten Willen nicht” = “for the life of me / no matter how hard I try”. Fixed superlative idiom. The article “beim” (= bei dem) signals strong/weak declension on the adjective → besten.

You hunt: Funktionsverbgefüge (zur Verfügung stellen, in Betracht ziehen), fixed prepositional phrases (auf Probe, im Großen und Ganzen), idioms.

FamilyQuick Recognition CueWhat you Hunt
GrammaticalArticles, auxiliaries, or conjugated verbs surround the gapEndings, participles, verb forms
LogicalComma or sentence-start beside the gap, two clauses on either sideConnectors, adverbs, conjunctions
LexicalA specific content word (verb / adjective / noun) sits next to the gapPrepositions in fixed collocations
IdiomaticNo grammar clue, no logical pivot — gap is inside a fixed expressionFunktionsverbgefüge, set phrases
Idiomatic gaps are the hardest because they do not bend to grammar reasoning. They reward vocabulary, not logic. Identify them early so you do not waste five minutes trying to “deduce” them — mark your best guess, flag the question, and move on.

Building the Reflex: The 30-Second Drill

For the next two weeks, every time you see a Sprachbausteine question, force yourself to do this in writing before checking your answer:

1Write the word immediately before the gap.
2Write the word immediately after the gap.
3Label the family: Grammatical / Logical / Lexical / Idiomatic.
4State what specifically you are hunting (e.g. “an adjective ending -en”, “an adversative connector at position 0”, “a Partizip II”).
5Now read the four options.

It feels slow at first. After two weeks, you will compress these five steps into three seconds — and your accuracy will rise from 50–60% guesswork to 80%+ reasoned answers.

Solved Exercise — Refresher

Apply the Three-Second Scan to each of the five gaps below before reading the answer. The reasoning, not the answer, is what you are practising.

Gap 1

Die Studie zeigt, dass viele Jugendliche _____ Stress am Arbeitsplatz leiden.
a) für b) auf c) unter d) in

Scan: verb leiden at the end → subordinate clause with dass. The fixed combination is leiden unter + Dativ. Family: Lexical. Hunting: a verb-preposition collocation. Answer: unter.

Gap 2

_____ der schwierigen Lage gelang es dem Team, das Projekt rechtzeitig abzuschließen.
a) Wegen b) Trotz c) Während d) Aufgrund

Scan: sentence start + ___ + Genitiv noun phrase + main clause. Family: Logical (concessive). The team succeeded despite the difficulty — adversative meaning. Answer: Trotz.

Gap 3

Der von der Kommission _____ Bericht enthält wichtige Empfehlungen.
a) veröffentlicht b) veröffentlichte c) veröffentlichen d) zu veröffentlichen

Scan: Der (definite article) … ___ + Bericht (masculine noun, Nominativ). Family: Grammatical. This is a Partizipialkonstruktion (passive participle phrase used as adjective). Weak declension on a Partizip II → -e ending. Answer: veröffentlichte.

Gap 4

Wir müssen die Entscheidung _____ Frage stellen.
a) auf b) in c) zur d) um

Scan: verb stellen + ___ + bare noun Frage. Family: Idiomatic — a Funktionsverbgefüge: etwas in Frage stellen (to call something into question). Answer: in.

Gap 5

Wenn ich gewusst hätte, was passiert, _____ ich anders entschieden.
a) habe b) würde c) hätte d) wäre

Scan: conditional clause with hätte gewusst (Konjunktiv II Vergangenheit) → main clause must mirror tense. Past unreal counterfactual + entschieden (Partizip II of entscheiden, which uses haben). Family: Grammatical. Answer: hätte.

Vocabulary Table — Case File №1

GermanEnglishNote
die Lücke, -ngap, blankthe empty slot in a Sprachbausteine question
die Bedingung, -enconditionoften appears in Konjunktiv II contexts
der Vorschlag, -¨eproposal, suggestioncollocates with einen Vorschlag machen / ablehnen
die Reform, -enreformfrequent in journalistic C1 texts
die Bevölkerungpopulationsingular only — not die Bevölkerungen
die Kritikcriticismcollocates with üben an + Dativ, auf sich ziehen
der Minister, –ministermasculine; feminine = die Ministerin
der Plan, -¨eplanan einem Plan festhalten = to stick to a plan
die Empfehlung, -enrecommendationeine Empfehlung aussprechen (to issue a recommendation)
der Bericht, -ereporteinen Bericht verfassen / erstellen / veröffentlichen
die Kommission, -encommissionnote: feminine, plural ends in -en
die Probe, -ntrial, rehearsalauf Probe einstellen = to hire on a trial basis
der Vertrag, -¨econtracteinen Vertrag unterschreiben / abschließen
festhalten an + Dativto stick toseparable verb; takes Dativ
leiden unter + Dativto suffer fromfixed verb-preposition pair
in Frage stellento call into questionFunktionsverbgefüge — note in, not auf
umsetzento implementseparable; common in policy texts
ablehnento rejectopposite of annehmen / akzeptieren
skeptischscepticalpredicative or attributive: skeptisch bleiben
rechtzeitigin time, on timenot the same as pünktlich (punctual)
CASE №1 · CLOSED

Next: Case File №2 — The Grammar Interrogation. The Detective examines case, gender, and verb form clues that decide a gap before lexicon ever enters the room.