Küchenablauf: Plusquamperfekt mit „nachdem“ und „bevor“

Kurz-Übung: Plusquamperfekt mit „nachdem“ – Kochschritte in richtiger Zeitfolge.
DannisDannis
2 min reading time
Ergänze: ______ der Koch die Brühe gekocht hatte, würzte er sie mit Salz.
Correct: 0/8

Hints for this Quiz

Which conjunction means “after”?
Use "nachdem" to mark an action completed earlier (Plusquamperfekt) before the main action in the past.
In German subclauses, the verb goes to the end. Participles come before the auxiliary.
In the subordinate clause with "nachdem", use Plusquamperfekt with the participle before the auxiliary at the end: "gekocht hatte".
Movement verbs (ankommen, gehen, fahren) use "sein" in the perfect tenses.
The supplier arrives first, then we check the ingredients.
For verbs of movement/state change, use "sein" in Plusquamperfekt: "angekommen war". Main clause can be Präteritum.
Think: clean first (Plusquamperfekt), then go (past). With "gehen" use "sein".
Der Koch verlässt nach dem Aufräumen die Küche.
Earlier completed action (cleaning) = Plusquamperfekt; for "gehen" use "sein": "war ... gegangen".
We want “after cooking, then tasting.” Choose "nachdem" + Plusquamperfekt.
Erst kochen, dann probieren.
Use "nachdem" + Plusquamperfekt to show the sauce was already cooked before the tasting.
Look for "hatten + Partizip II" at the end of the subclause.
Erst vorheizen, dann Kuchen hinein schieben.
Correct Plusquamperfekt form in the subclause and consistent past in the main clause.
Earlier completed action = Plusquamperfekt. "Kochen" takes "haben" (nicht "sein").
Use Plusquamperfekt for the earlier finished action: cooking finished before the guests came.
Leaving = gehen → use "sein"; cooking with "nach Hause" makes no sense.
Die Spülkraft ist noch da; der Küchenchef ist schon weg.
For "gehen" use "sein" in the past perfect: "war ... gegangen". The other options are ungrammatical or nonsensical.

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