Höfliche Vorschläge im Team: Konjunktiv II im Planning

Mini-Artikel + 2 Rewrites: Konjunktiv-II-Formeln für Vorschläge im Planning, mit kurzen Beispielen.
DannisDannis
2 min reading time
Welche Formulierung ist als höflicher Vorschlag im Sprint-Planning am besten? (Thema: Deployment am Freitag vermeiden)
Correct: 0/8

Hints for this Quiz

Look for Konjunktiv II with “würden” + infinitive to make a soft suggestion.
The Konjunktiv II frame “Wir würden vorschlagen, …” sounds polite and professional. The other options are either ungrammatical or too direct.
You want to ask if it is possible, not if it is necessary.
“Könnten wir …?” (Konjunktiv II of können) is the standard polite way to ask about feasibility. The others express obligation or desire, not a soft request.
Choose the formula that asks about possibility, not the one that orders.
“Wäre es möglich, …?” is a very polite and common phrasing for requests. The others are descriptive or too direct.
After “vorschlagen,” use “zu + Infinitiv” for the action.
After “vorschlagen,” the zu-infinitive is required: “aufzuteilen.” The other options have missing “zu,” wrong structure, or mismatched clause type.
Pick the one that checks possibility rather than commands.
“Wäre es möglich, …?” politely checks feasibility. The other options are either direct, informal, or oddly phrased as a question.
Use Konjunktiv II of “können” to ask about feasibility.
“Könnten wir … verlängern?” is the idiomatic, polite Konjunktiv II question. The other options are ungrammatical or not framed as a polite question.
You want “could,” not “must/should.”
“könnten” asks about possibility and is polite. The other verbs express duty/necessity, not a soft request.
Look for the phrasing that asks about possibility, not an order.
“Wäre es möglich, …?” frames the request politely and clearly. The others are too direct or self-centered.

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