Here is a short exercise for you to practice two separable verbs in German: einatmen and ausatmen.
You may have noticed these two verbs in a blog post earlier this month, and to help you learn them even better, you'll use them in this exercise.
This may be the most relaxing German separable verbs exercise you'll find on the interwebs.
Separable verbs are not hard to understand, however learning to use them takes practice and time. For the purposes of this first section, we'll use two separable verbs in the present tense – so we'll use them to talk about now.
Right now.
A separable verb (in German: ein trennbares Verb, plural: trennbare Verben) is a verb that requires you to do three things :
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remove the prefix from the verb,
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conjugate what's left, and then
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tack the prefix on to the end of the sentence.
That's the entire rule.
Das ist alles.
That's what most of you understand, all of you who read this first section. Here's what will set you apart from all the rest: learn to actually use these verbs in German. Learn to separate that prefix, conjugate the stem (what's left) and tack it on at the end 100% of the time.
Understanding a rule is one thing. Practice is something entirely different.
Üben wir! (Let's practice!)
Here are two very good verbs: einatmen and ausatmen.
Einatmen means to breathe in or to inhale.
Ausatmen means to breathe out or to exhale.
Now we apply the rule. Let's use it with “ich.”
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remove the prefix from the verb – atmen ein
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conjugate what's left – ich atme
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tack the prefix on to the end of the sentence – ich atme ein.
That happens to be the sentence “I breathe in.”
“Ich atme ein.”
Now do the same thing with ausatmen.
You should end up with:
Ich atme aus.
Now practice this while you breathe in and then while you breathe out. Say the sentences aloud in your mind.
Ich atme ein. Ich atme aus.
Ich atme ein. Ich atme aus.
Ich atme ein. Ich atme aus.
Danke, dass Sie diese Übung mitgemacht haben. ~ Thank you for taking part in this exercise.
Hopefully you are more relaxed now!