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B1 German GrammarAdverbs & Adverb Position

Master German adverbs and their placement in sentences. Learn how adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs, and understand the critical TeKaMoLo rule for ordering multiple adverbs in German sentences.

1Types of German Adverbs

German adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. Unlike English, many German adverbs have the same form as their adjective counterparts (schnell = fast/quickly). Adverbs don't change form based on gender, case, or number. They are categorized into temporal (time), kausal (reason), modal (manner), and lokal (place) adverbs.

Common Adverb Types

TypeGermanEnglishExample
Temporalheute, morgen, gesterntoday, tomorrow, yesterdayIch komme heute.
Kausaldeshalb, trotzdem, darumtherefore, neverthelessDeshalb bin ich hier.
Modalschnell, gut, gernquickly, well, gladlyEr läuft schnell.
Lokalhier, dort, obenhere, there, aboveSie wohnt dort.

Examples

Sie singt sehr schön.

She sings very beautifully.

sehr modifies schön

Ich fahre oft nach Berlin.

I often go to Berlin.

oft = frequency adverb

Er arbeitet fleißig.

He works diligently.

fleißig = manner adverb

Draußen regnet es.

It's raining outside.

Draußen = place adverb

2The TeKaMoLo Rule

When a German sentence has multiple adverbs, they follow the TeKaMoLo order: Temporal (when) → Kausal (why) → Modal (how) → Lokal (where). This is the natural order for German speakers. Violating this order sounds unnatural, though elements can be moved to the front for emphasis.

TeKaMoLo Order

PositionTypeQuestionExample
1stTemporalWann? (When?)heute, gestern, morgen
2ndKausalWarum? (Why?)deshalb, wegen des Wetters
3rdModalWie? (How?)schnell, mit dem Auto
4thLokalWo/Wohin? (Where?)in Berlin, nach Hause

Examples

Ich fahre heute wegen der Arbeit schnell nach München.

I'm driving quickly to Munich today because of work.

heute (Te) + wegen (Ka) + schnell (Mo) + nach München (Lo)

Er geht morgen gern ins Kino.

He likes going to the cinema tomorrow.

morgen (Te) + gern (Mo) + ins Kino (Lo)

Sie bleibt heute trotzdem lange zu Hause.

She's staying home for a long time today nevertheless.

heute (Te) + trotzdem (Ka) + lange (Mo) + zu Hause (Lo)

Wir essen abends immer gemütlich im Garten.

We always eat comfortably in the garden in the evening.

abends (Te) + immer (Te) + gemütlich (Mo) + im Garten (Lo)

3Adverb Position in Main Clauses

In German main clauses, adverbs typically come after the conjugated verb. Time adverbs often come right after the verb or even at position 1 for emphasis. The subject-verb inversion rule applies: if an adverb starts the sentence, the verb comes second and the subject follows.

Adverb Positions

PositionExampleNote
After verbIch gehe oft spazieren.Standard position
Position 1Oft gehe ich spazieren.Emphasis on 'often'
After objectIch esse Pizza gern.Modal after object
Before infinitiveIch kann gut schwimmen.Before infinitive

Examples

Manchmal lese ich abends ein Buch.

Sometimes I read a book in the evening.

Manchmal in position 1, verb second

Ich bin leider krank.

Unfortunately, I am sick.

leider after the verb

Er hat das Buch wahrscheinlich vergessen.

He probably forgot the book.

wahrscheinlich between auxiliary and participle

Morgen muss ich früh aufstehen.

Tomorrow I have to get up early.

Morgen position 1 + inversion

4Comparative and Superlative Adverbs

German adverbs can be compared like adjectives. The comparative adds -er (schneller = faster), and the superlative uses 'am + -sten' (am schnellsten = fastest). Some common adverbs have irregular forms: gern → lieber → am liebsten; gut → besser → am besten; viel → mehr → am meisten.

Adverb Comparison

PositiveComparativeSuperlativeEnglish
schnellschnelleram schnellstenfast, faster, fastest
langsamlangsameram langsamstenslow, slower, slowest
gernlieberam liebstengladly (irregular)
gutbesseram bestenwell (irregular)
vielmehram meistenmuch (irregular)

Examples

Sie läuft schneller als ich.

She runs faster than I do.

schneller + als for comparison

Ich trinke lieber Kaffee als Tee.

I prefer drinking coffee to tea.

lieber = prefer (irregular)

Er spricht am besten Deutsch.

He speaks German the best.

am besten = superlative

Von allen Sportarten mag ich Fußball am liebsten.

Of all sports, I like soccer the most.

am liebsten = most gladly