Fahrunterricht: Imperativ mit trennbaren Verben
Trennbare Verben im Fahrunterricht: Imperative passend ergänzen.
Dannis
Ergänze den Imperativ (Sie): ________ links!
Correct: 0/8
Hints for this Quiz
Polite imperative starts with the verb, then “Sie”.
For the polite imperative (Sie), use: verb + Sie + rest. Here: Blinken Sie links!
Sie-Imperativ: “Parken Sie …” and put “ein” at the end.
Separable verbs split in main clauses and the imperative: Parken Sie rückwärts ein. The prefix “ein” goes to the end.
Du-form: “fahr”, not “fähr” or “Fahren Sie”.
Du-imperative often drops the -e: Fahr! With separable verbs the prefix goes to the end: Fahr jetzt los!
You’re talking to one person informally (du).
Du-imperative: Steig aus! (common spoken form). “Steigt …” is ihr, and “Steigen Sie …” is the polite form.
Begin with the verb; the prefix goes to the end.
Polite imperative starts with the verb, then Sie, place/time/manner, and the prefix at the end: Parken Sie hier langsam ein.
Use the Sie-imperative form.
For polite commands to a single person in formal address, use “Machen Sie …”.
Imperative with Sie starts with the verb.
Only “Blinken Sie links!” is an imperative. “Sie blinken …” is a statement; “anblinken” is not used here.
Keep “ein” at the end and use the Sie-form.
Negative imperative with a separable verb: “Parken Sie nicht … ein.” The prefix “ein” must be at the end.
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