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C1-Grammer

Detective Guide Sprachbausteine 2/5

Reading Time: 6 minutes
German Tadka · Detective Series II
Case File №2 · Sprachbausteine for telc C1

The Grammar Interrogation

In which Detective Tadka teaches you to question the grammar of a gap before its meaning — because cases, genders, and verb forms eliminate three of four suspects long before vocabulary enters the room.
“Half the gaps in this examination,” said the Detective, tapping the table, “can be solved without understanding what the sentence means. The grammar alone is enough. A preposition forces a case. An article reveals a gender. A modal verb demands an infinitive at the end. Learn to interrogate the grammar first — and you will close half the cases before lexicon is even on the table.”

The Five Grammatical Interrogations

When a gap is grammatical (article + ___ + noun, or wurde + ___, or hätte + ___), you run five questions in order. Each question eliminates suspects faster than the last.

1Which case is required? What preposition or verb governs the noun phrase containing the gap?
2What is the gender and number of the noun? Singular or plural? der / die / das?
3What article type stands before the adjective? Definite (der-word), indefinite (ein-word), or none?
4What tense and mood does the surrounding clause use? Indicative? Konjunktiv II? Active? Passive?
5Where is the gap in the verb chain? Finite verb position? Infinitive at the end? Partizip II?
“Three of four options always die in the grammar interrogation. Make them die early.”

Interrogation 1 — The Case Detector

Roughly six gaps per paper hinge on case. The signal is almost always a preposition or a case-governing verb to the left of the gap.

The Preposition Cheat-Sheet

Always AkkusativAlways DativAlways Genitiv
durch, für, gegen, ohne, um, bis, entlangaus, bei, mit, nach, seit, von, zu, gegenübertrotz, wegen, während, (an)statt, aufgrund, mittels, hinsichtlich, angesichts
Wechselpräpositionen (Akk. for movement / Dat. for location)
an, auf, hinter, in, neben, über, unter, vor, zwischen
The Genitiv Tell
At C1 level, Genitiv prepositions (trotz, wegen, während, aufgrund, hinsichtlich) are the most-tested. If you see one of these immediately before an article + noun gap, your declension target is Genitiv. Masc/Neut Sg → -es on noun, -en on adjective. Fem Sg & Plural → article ends -er, adjective -en.

Worked Example — Case + Adjective Combined

Aufgrund der _____ wirtschaftlichen Lage musste das Projekt verschoben werden. Owing to the _____ economic situation, the project had to be postponed.

Step 1: aufgrund → Genitiv. Step 2: Lage = feminine. Step 3: der = definite article → weak declension. Step 4: Genitiv feminine + weak declension → adjective ending must be -en. Step 5: a second adjective wirtschaftlichen follows; parallel adjectives take the same ending.

a) angespannt b) angespannte c) angespannten d) angespanntes

Notice: I never had to know what angespannt means. The grammar alone closed the case.

Interrogation 2 — The Adjective Declension Map

Three to four gaps per paper test declension. Recall the rule from your Detective Guide to Adjective Declension: identify article type first, then case + gender. Here is the compressed table you must have automatic.

After der-words (weak)MaskFemNeutPlural
Nom-e-e-e-en
Akk-en-e-e-en
Dat-en-en-en-en
Gen-en-en-en-en
After ein-words (mixed)MaskFemNeutPlural
Nom-er-e-es-en
Akk-en-e-es-en
Dat-en-en-en-en
Gen-en-en-en-en
No article (strong)MaskFemNeutPlural
Nom-er-e-es-e
Akk-en-e-es-e
Dat-em-er-em-en
Gen-en-er-en-er
The most frequent mistake at C1 is misidentifying the declension type, not the ending. Always look left first: Was steht vor dem Adjektiv? If nothing → strong. If ein/kein/mein with no ending → mixed switches to strong endings. Else → weak.

Interrogation 3 — The Verb Chain

Two to three gaps per paper sit inside a verb chain (Modalverb + Infinitiv, Perfekt with haben/sein + Partizip II, Vorgangspassiv, Konjunktiv II). The grammar of the surrounding chain dictates the gap form.

The Five Verb-Chain Patterns

PatternStructureGap is…
Modalverbkann / muss / soll / ___ + Infinitiv at endinfinitive (no zu)
Perfekthabe/bin + ___ Partizip IIPartizip II form, often with prefix ge-
Vorgangspassivwird/wurde + ___ Partizip IIPartizip II of the action verb
Zustandspassivist/war + ___ Partizip IIPartizip II describing a state
Konjunktiv II Vergangenheithätte/wäre + ___ Partizip IIPartizip II + sometimes Modalverb infinitive

Worked Example — The Konjunktiv II Chain

Wenn die Firma rechtzeitig reagiert hätte, _____ der Schaden vermieden werden können. If the company had reacted in time, the damage could have been avoided.

Verb chain analysis: first clause = Konjunktiv II Vergangenheit Aktiv (hätte reagiert). Second clause = Konjunktiv II Vergangenheit + Passiv + Modalverb (könnte vermieden worden sein → in this construction the auxiliary becomes hätte + vermieden werden können, the famous double-infinitive at the end).

a) wäre b) hätte c) würde d) könnte

Why hätte? Because the structure vermieden werden können (Modalverb + Infinitiv Passiv) demands haben as auxiliary, not sein. Würde would force a present-tense reading. Könnte is already lexicalised in können at the end of the chain.

Interrogation 4 — The Pronoun Lineup

One to two gaps per paper test reference: relative pronouns, demonstratives, or da/wo-compounds. The signal is a comma, a Bezugswort (referent), and an empty slot.

Relative Pronoun Decision Tree

MaskFemNeutPlural
Nomderdiedasdie
Akkdendiedasdie
Datdemderdemdenen
Gendessenderendessenderen
The Two-Step Pronoun Rule
Gender + number come from the Bezugswort in the main clause. Case comes from how the pronoun is used inside the relative clause. Never let the gender of the relative-clause subject confuse you — that subject and the pronoun are different actors.

Worked Example — Relative Pronoun

Das Buch, _____ Autor letzte Woche verstorben ist, gilt als Klassiker der modernen Literatur. The book, whose author died last week, is considered a classic of modern literature.

Bezugswort: das Buch → neuter, singular. Function inside relative clause: Autor belongs to the book → possessive → Genitiv. Neuter singular Genitiv → dessen.

a) der b) deren c) dessen d) dem

Interrogation 5 — The Pronominaladverb (da- / wo-)

Roughly one gap per paper tests da-compounds (damit, dafür, darauf, daran, davon) or wo-compounds (womit, wofür, worauf, woran, wovon). The trigger is always a verb-preposition collocation pointing back at a fact, idea, or full clause.

UseFormTrigger
Refers back to a fact / clauseda- + preposition (damit, davon, daran)verb requires preposition; antecedent is a thing or idea, not a person
Anticipates a dass-clause or infinitiveda- + prepositionverb + preposition pointing forward to a clause
Question word for things / ideaswo- + preposition (worüber, woran, wofür)indirect or direct question about a non-person

Worked Example — da-Compound

Die Studentin freut sich _____, dass sie das Stipendium bekommen hat. The student is happy that she has received the scholarship.

Verb: sich freuen über + Akk. Antecedent: a dass-clause. Therefore: we need da-compound that anticipates the dass-clause: darüber.

a) davon b) darüber c) damit d) darauf

Solved Exercise — Refresher

Run the five interrogations on each gap before reading the answer.

Gap 1

Trotz _____ Bemühungen konnte das Unternehmen den Konkurs nicht abwenden.
a) intensive b) intensives c) intensiver d) intensiven

Interrogation: trotz → Genitiv. Bemühungen = plural. No article (zero-article construction with abstract plural). Strong declension, Genitiv plural → -er. Answer: intensiver.

Gap 2

Der Bericht muss bis zum Monatsende _____ werden.
a) fertig stellen b) fertiggestellt c) fertigstellt d) fertig zu stellen

Interrogation: muss … werden = Modalverb + Vorgangspassiv. The slot demands a Partizip II. fertigstellen is separable but in Partizip II it remains fertiggestellt (the prefix fertig behaves like a separable particle, so ge- sits between). Answer: fertiggestellt.

Gap 3

Das ist die Kollegin, _____ ich gestern den Bericht weitergeleitet habe.
a) die b) der c) deren d) wem

Interrogation: Bezugswort = die Kollegin → fem. sg. Inside the clause: jemandem etwas weiterleiten → indirect object → Dativ. Fem. sg. Dativ relative pronoun → der. Answer: der.

Gap 4

Wenn er das gewusst hätte, _____ er anders gehandelt.
a) wäre b) hätte c) würde d) hat

Interrogation: Konjunktiv II Vergangenheit. handeln uses haben as auxiliary. Mirror tense from gewusst hätte. Answer: hätte.

Gap 5

Wir müssen uns _____ konzentrieren, was wirklich wichtig ist.
a) damit b) darauf c) davon d) dafür

Interrogation: sich konzentrieren auf + Akk. Antecedent is a was-clause → da-compound anticipating a clause: darauf. Answer: darauf.

Vocabulary Table — Case File №2

GermanEnglishNote
die Bemühung, -eneffortalmost always plural in C1 texts
der Konkurs, -ebankruptcyKonkurs anmelden / abwenden
der Schaden, -¨damageSchaden anrichten / vermeiden
die Lage, -nsituation, locationangespannte / wirtschaftliche / politische Lage
das Stipendium, -ienscholarshipplural irregular: Stipendien
die Kollegin, -nencolleague (f.)masc. = der Kollege, -n, -n (n-Deklination)
der Autor, -enauthorfem. = die Autorin; stress shifts: Autór sg., Autóren pl.
der Klassiker, –classicmasculine; als Klassiker gelten
angespannttense, strainedused for situations, markets, relationships
verstorbendeceasedPartizip II of versterben; formal register
verschiebento postponestrong verb: verschob — verschoben
vermeidento avoidstrong verb: vermied — vermieden
abwendento avert, ward offseparable; einen Konflikt abwenden
fertigstellento complete, finishseparable; Partizip II = fertiggestellt
weiterleitento forwardseparable; jemandem etwas weiterleiten (Dat. + Akk.)
handelnto actuses haben; do not confuse with sich handeln um
sich konzentrieren auf + Akkto focus onfixed verb-preposition; reflexive
sich freuen über + Akkto be glad aboutvs. sich freuen auf + Akk = to look forward to
gelten als + Nomto be regarded asnote: takes Nominativ, not Akkusativ
reagieren auf + Akkto react toverb-preposition collocation
CASE №2 · CLOSED

Next: Case File №3 — The Lexical Lineup. The Detective confronts the four-suspect parade of near-synonyms and false friends — connectors that all mean “but,” prepositions that all look right, and the verb-preposition pairs that fool everyone.