💡 Introduction If you’re learning German, one of the first challenges you’ll face is figuring out whether a noun is masculine (der) , feminine (die) , or neuter (das) . These gender rules are essential because they affect articles, adjective endings, and sentence structure . Don’t worry — this guide from GermanLanguageHub will help you easily identify the gender of any noun and understand how German plurals work too. 🧔 Masculine Nouns — der Masculine nouns usually refer to male people, animals, or professions , but many objects are masculine too. ✅ Examples: der Mann (man) der Lehrer (male teacher) der Hund (dog) 📘 Common Endings for Masculine Nouns If a noun ends with one of these, it’s usually masculine: -en , -el , -er → der Garten, der Vogel, der Computer -ig → der König (king) -ich → der Teppich (carpet) -ling → der Schmetterling (butterfly) -or , -us → der Motor, der Zirkus 💡 Tip: All days, months, and seasons are masculine. 👉 der Montag, ...
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