Answers

Jul 27, 2018 - 03:56 PM
Hi Carloangelli,
I'm also learning German with Fluenz, and I think I can help. In the plural Dative case, in addition to using den, you must also add an 'n' to the end of the noun. So it's "in den Gerichten" not "in den Gerichte."
I wish I knew where this point is introduced, but one of the drawbacks that I've found using Fluenz is that it is very difficult to go back and find where a particular word or grammar point was introduced.
I'm also learning German with Fluenz, and I think I can help. In the plural Dative case, in addition to using den, you must also add an 'n' to the end of the noun. So it's "in den Gerichten" not "in den Gerichte."
I wish I knew where this point is introduced, but one of the drawbacks that I've found using Fluenz is that it is very difficult to go back and find where a particular word or grammar point was introduced.

Jul 28, 2018 - 06:26 AM
Thank you for your help gslander68.

Aug 27, 2018 - 11:53 AM
Great explanation gsandler68! It's a plural dative form here so both the article and the noun have to end in EN.
This specific point is taught in German level 2 session 10. You can always go to the Global German Index and browse the index of any level when you're not sure where a point is introduced.
tschüss!
This specific point is taught in German level 2 session 10. You can always go to the Global German Index and browse the index of any level when you're not sure where a point is introduced.
tschüss!