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German sentence structure is somewhat more complex than that of many other European languages, but similar to Dutch, with phrases regularly inverted for both questions and subordinate phrases. The main sentence structure rule is that the conjugated verb is the second element in a main clause or the last in a subordinate clause. Verbs in the infinitive are generally placed after their respective objects. ==Main Sentence== If a verb has a separable prefix, this prefix is moved to the end of the sentence. :''Ich werde den Müll wegwerfen.'' ("I will throw away the rubbish.", literally "I will the rubbish away-throw.") :''Ich werfe den Müll weg.'' (statement) ("I'm throwing away / I throw away the rubbish.", literally "I throw the rubbish away.") :''Werfe ich den Müll weg?'' (question) ("Am I throwing away the rubbish?", literally "Throw I the rubbish away?") :''Wirf den Müll weg!'' (command, familiar form) ("Throw away the rubbish!", literally "Throw the rubbish away!") 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「German sentence structure」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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