Ablaut Classes in German
Ablaut Classes in German
Ablaut Classes in German
ab away from + Laut sound] (1849) a systematic variation of vowels in the same root or affix or in related roots or affixes esp. in the Indo-European languages that is usu. paralleled by differences in use or meaning (as in sing, sang, sung, song) There are seven main ablaut classes or categories found in the conjugation of verbs in modern Germanic languages (German, Dutch, English, etc.). These vowel-shift patterns make it easier to learn how to conjugate strong verbs in German. Some German verbs even follow the identical English vowel pattern: German trinken, trank, getrunken vs. English drink, drank, drunk. In modern German, classes 3b and 4 are identical. In English, Class 4 verbs have retained an -n in the past participle (broken, spoken) not found in Class 3b. Use the table below to learn more about German strong-verb patterns and the ablaut classes. Click on a class to see German verbs in that class and the vowel pattern for that category. Also see the alphabetical list below.
*Class 7 verbs are uniform in having an ie past tense form, but the other vowels in the infinitive or past participle forms can vary: a/au/ei/o/u. See the chart for details. Exceptions Ausnahmen Odd verb patterns Mixed Verbs - German verbs that combine weak and strong forms Ablaut Classes - Alphabetical List German Strong-Verb Vowel Patterns a - ie - a (Class 7) a - u - a (Class 6) e - a - e (Class 5) e - a - o (Class 3b/4) e - o - o (Class 3b/4) ei - i - i (Class 1a) ei - ie - ie (Class 1b) i - a - o/u (Class 3a) ie - o - o (Class 2) [x] - ie - [x] (Class 7)