heim
heim في 30 ثانية
- Used to indicate direction towards home (homewards).
- Commonly functions as a separable prefix for motion verbs.
- Cannot be used for location; use 'zu Hause' instead.
- Carries emotional weight of returning to safety or roots.
The German adverb heim is a deceptively simple word that carries immense emotional and directional weight. Primarily used to indicate movement toward one's home or place of origin, it serves as a concise alternative to the phrase nach Hause. While both mean 'homewards,' heim often feels more visceral, rooted in the deep Germanic concept of Heimat—a place where one truly belongs. In modern German, you will encounter heim most frequently as part of separable verbs like heimgehen (to go home), heimkommen (to come home), or heimkehren (to return home). It is not just about a physical building; it is about the transition from the public sphere back to the private, safe sanctuary of the individual. Understanding heim requires recognizing its role as a directional pointer. Unlike zu Hause, which describes a state of being located at home, heim always implies a vector—a journey from 'out there' to 'back here.'
- Directionality
- The word heim signals movement towards a destination. It answers the question Wohin? (Whither/To where?).
- Emotional Resonance
- It suggests a return to safety, comfort, and familiarity, often used in literature to evoke nostalgia or a sense of belonging.
In colloquial speech, heim is extremely common in Southern Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, where it often replaces nach Hause entirely. For example, a Bavarian might say, "I geh' heim," whereas a Northern German might prefer "Ich gehe nach Hause," though both are universally understood. Furthermore, heim appears in sports terminology, such as Heimsieg (home victory) or Heimspiel (home game), reinforcing the idea of one's own territory. It is also found in darker contexts, such as heimleuchten (to give someone a piece of one's mind, literally 'to light someone home') or the poetic heimgehen as a euphemism for dying—returning to a final, eternal home.
Es ist schon spät, wir sollten jetzt endlich heim gehen.
Historically, the adverb stems from the same root as the English 'home' and the German noun das Heim. However, learners must be careful: das Heim as a noun often refers to an institution, like a nursing home (Altersheim) or a children's home (Kinderheim). Using the adverb heim avoids this institutional connotation, focusing purely on the direction of travel. In the 19th-century Romantic era, poets used heim to express the 'Heimweh' (homesickness) that defined the human condition—a longing for a place that perhaps only exists in memory or spirit. Today, whether you are leaving a party or finishing a long shift at work, saying "Ich will nur noch heim" expresses a universal human desire for rest.
Nach der langen Reise sehnte er sich danach, wieder heim zu kehren.
- Grammatical Role
- It functions as a directional adverb or a separable prefix. When combined with a verb, the stress always falls on 'heim'.
Using heim correctly in a sentence depends largely on whether you treat it as a standalone adverb or as part of a separable verb. In German, verbs like heimfahren (to drive home) are common. In a simple present tense sentence, the prefix heim moves to the very end: "Ich fahre heute früher heim." This follows the standard rule for separable verbs. However, heim is flexible. You can also use it with modal verbs without a secondary verb if the movement is implied: "Ich muss heim" (I must [go] home). This ellipsis is very common in spoken German and adds a sense of urgency or directness.
- Separable Verb Usage
- Verbs like heimkommen split in the present tense: "Er kommt spät heim." In the perfect tense, they combine: "Er ist spät heimgekommen."
When constructing complex sentences, heim usually occupies the position reserved for directional complements. If you have a sentence with multiple elements, heim typically comes after the time and manner but before the final verb part. For example: "Ich bin gestern wegen des Regens schnell heim gerannt." Here, gestern (time) and wegen des Regens schnell (reason/manner) precede heim. This logical flow helps the listener understand the destination of the action immediately before the action is completed.
Kannst du mich nach der Party bitte heim bringen?
One of the more advanced uses of heim is in figurative expressions. Take the verb heimzahlen, which means 'to pay back' in the sense of revenge. "Das werde ich dir heimzahlen!" (I'll pay you back for that!). Here, the concept of 'home' is used metaphorically to mean returning an action to its source. Similarly, heimleuchten uses the imagery of lighting someone's way home to describe a harsh reprimand. These idiomatic uses show how deeply the concept of 'returning' is embedded in the word heim. Whether literal or metaphorical, the word always involves a closing of a loop, a return to a starting point or a rightful place.
Sie sind gestern Abend erst sehr spät heim gekehrt.
- The 'Home' vs. 'Homewards' Distinction
- In English, 'home' can be a place or a direction. In German, heim is strictly the direction. You cannot say "Ich bin heim" to mean "I am at home"; you must say "Ich bin zu Hause."
If you walk through the streets of Munich, Vienna, or Zurich, you will hear heim constantly. In these regions, it is the default way to say one is heading back. A common phrase heard at the end of a long night is "I geh' jetz' hoam" (the Bavarian/Austrian dialect version of heim). But even in Standard German (Hochdeutsch), heim is everywhere. You'll hear it in train stations: "Wann fährt der nächste Zug heim?" (When does the next train go home?). You'll hear it in offices: "Endlich Feierabend, ich will nur noch heim." It is the word of relief, the word of the end of the day, and the word of belonging.
- In Sports Culture
- Commentators often talk about the Heimmannschaft (home team) and their Heimvorteil (home advantage). If a team wins at their own stadium, it is a Heimsieg.
In the media, heim is often used in headlines about refugees or expatriates returning to their native countries: "Die Flüchtlinge kehren heim." This usage is heavy with political and social significance, as it implies a definitive return to one's roots. You will also find it in Christmas carols and folk songs. The famous song "Kein schöner Land in dieser Zeit" speaks of the joy of being together before everyone goes heim. In these contexts, the word transcends its grammatical function as an adverb and becomes a symbol of cultural identity and communal peace.
Nach dem Sieg fuhr die Mannschaft jubelnd heim.
Children often use the word when playing. If they are playing tag, the 'safe zone' might be called heim or das Heim. If a child is tired, they might simply whimper, "Ich will heim." This simplicity makes it one of the first directional adverbs a child learns. In literature, specifically during the 'Sturm und Drang' and Romantic periods, heim was used to contrast the cold, rational world with the warmth of the domestic or spiritual home. Goethe and Schiller frequently employed the term to ground their characters' journeys in a tangible sense of destination.
"Führ mich heim," flüsterte sie erschöpft.
- In Traditional Idioms
- "Jemanden heimschicken" (to send someone home) can mean literally sending them home or, in a competition, defeating them so they are eliminated.
The most frequent mistake English speakers make with heim is confusing it with zu Hause. Because the English word 'home' can mean both 'at home' (location) and 'to home' (direction), learners often try to say "Ich bin heim" to mean "I am at home." This is grammatically incorrect in standard German. You must use zu Hause or the colloquial daheim for location. Heim is strictly for movement. Another common error is adding unnecessary prepositions, like saying "nach heim." Since heim already contains the directional meaning, the 'nach' is redundant and incorrect. It is simply heim or nach Hause, never a mixture of the two.
- Confusion with the Noun
- Don't confuse the adverb heim with the noun das Heim. If you say "Ich gehe in das Heim," you are saying you are going into an institution (like a dormitory or nursing home), not necessarily your own private house.
Another nuance involves the difference between heim and nach Hause in formal writing. While heim is perfectly acceptable, nach Hause is often seen as slightly more formal or neutral in Northern Germany. If you are writing a business email and want to say you are leaving the office to work from home, you would typically say "Ich arbeite von zu Hause aus" rather than using heim. Using heim in a professional context can sometimes sound a bit too abrupt or overly colloquial, depending on the region.
Falsch: Ich bin heim.
Richtig: Ich bin zu Hause.
Learners also struggle with the separable verb aspect. In a sentence like "Ich will heimkommen," the word is one unit. But in "Ich komme heute heim," it is two. Forgetting to move heim to the end of the clause is a common syntax error. For example, saying "Ich heimkomme heute" is a classic beginner mistake. Always remember that the prefix heim acts like auf, aus, or an—it wants to be at the very end of the main clause.
Falsch: Ich gehe nach heim.
Richtig: Ich gehe heim.
- The 'Daheim' Trap
- Sometimes students use daheim for movement. Daheim is exclusively for location (like 'at home'). You cannot 'go daheim'; you can only 'be daheim'.
The most direct alternative to heim is nach Hause. In almost every context involving physical movement, these two are interchangeable. However, nach Hause is slightly more analytical (literally 'to house'), while heim is more abstract and adverbial. If you want to emphasize the direction specifically, you might use heimwärts. This suffix -wärts (equivalent to the English '-wards') makes the directional intent even clearer. For example, "Wir wanderten heimwärts" suggests a slow, steady progression toward home, perhaps over a long distance.
- Heim vs. Nach Hause
- 'Heim' is shorter and often carries more emotional weight. 'Nach Hause' is the standard, neutral choice in Northern Germany.
- Heim vs. Daheim
- 'Heim' is movement (Whither?). 'Daheim' is static location (Where?). You go heim to be daheim.
Another related word is zurück (back). While heim implies returning home, zurück just implies returning to a previous location. If you are at a hotel and returning to that hotel, you would say "Ich gehe zurück," but not "Ich gehe heim" (unless you consider the hotel your home). There is also the word nach Hausezu, a more dialectal or archaic way of saying 'towards home,' though it is rarely heard in modern cities. In professional settings, you might hear an den Wohnort (to the place of residence), which is the bureaucratic, cold version of heim.
Statt heim zu gehen, blieb er noch im Büro.
In terms of verbs, heimkehren is a more formal, elevated version of heimkommen. It is used for soldiers returning from war, travelers returning after years abroad, or in religious contexts. Heimfinden (to find one's way home) is another beautiful variant, often used metaphorically for someone finding their path in life. On the other hand, nach Hause trotten (to trudge home) or nach Hause flitzen (to dash home) show how nach Hause is often paired with specific manners of movement, whereas heim is more frequently used with simple verbs of motion like gehen, fahren, and laufen.
Der Wanderer blickte sehnsüchtig heimwärts.
- Heim vs. Heimat
- 'Heimat' is the noun for homeland/roots. 'Heim' is the adverb for going there. They share the same soul but different grammatical bodies.
How Formal Is It?
"Nach Abschluss der Verhandlungen kehrten die Delegierten heim."
"Ich fahre nach der Arbeit direkt heim."
"Ich bin dann mal heim, bis morgen!"
"Komm, wir gehen jetzt heim und essen Nudeln."
"Ab heim mit dir, es ist schon spät!"
حقيقة ممتعة
The word 'heim' is the root of many English place names ending in '-ham', like 'Birmingham' or 'Nottingham', which originally meant 'the home of...'.
دليل النطق
- Pronouncing 'ei' as 'ee' (like 'heem'). In German, 'ei' is always 'eye'.
- Muttering the 'm' too softly; it should be clear.
- Confusing it with 'hi' (English greeting).
مستوى الصعوبة
Very easy to recognize in text.
Requires knowledge of separable verb placement.
Easy to pronounce but requires distinguishing from 'zu Hause'.
Common in all dialects, though pronunciation varies slightly.
ماذا تتعلّم بعد ذلك
المتطلبات الأساسية
تعلّم لاحقاً
متقدم
قواعد يجب معرفتها
Separable Verbs (Trennbare Verben)
Ich komme heim. (Prefix 'heim' moves to the end).
Directional Adverbs
'Heim' answers 'Wohin?', whereas 'daheim' answers 'Wo?'.
Modal Verbs as Main Verbs
In 'Ich muss heim', the verb 'gehen' is implied.
Word Order with Multiple Objects
Ich bringe dir (Dative) die Bücher (Accusative) heim (Directional).
Infinitive with 'zu'
Es ist schön, heimzukommen. (The 'zu' goes between prefix and verb).
أمثلة حسب المستوى
Ich gehe jetzt heim.
I am going home now.
Simple adverbial use showing direction.
Kommst du mit heim?
Are you coming home with me?
Interrogative sentence with 'heim' at the end.
Er fährt mit dem Bus heim.
He is going home by bus.
Used with the verb 'fahren' for transport.
Wir müssen heim.
We must go home.
Modal verb 'müssen' with implied 'gehen'.
Geh bitte heim!
Please go home!
Imperative form.
Wann gehst du heim?
When are you going home?
Question word 'wann' starts the sentence.
Ich will heim.
I want to go home.
Modal verb 'wollen' with implied motion.
Sie läuft schnell heim.
She is running home quickly.
Adverb 'schnell' modifies the action.
Wann kommst du heute heim?
When are you coming home today?
Separable verb 'heimkommen'.
Ich bin gestern spät heimgekommen.
I came home late yesterday.
Perfect tense: 'ist heimgekommen'.
Wir wollen morgen früher heimfahren.
We want to drive home earlier tomorrow.
Infinitive 'heimfahren' at the end of the sentence.
Bringst du mich nach der Schule heim?
Will you take me home after school?
Separable verb 'heimbringen'.
Das Kind ist allein heimgegangen.
The child went home alone.
Perfect tense of 'heimgehen'.
Können wir jetzt endlich heim?
Can we finally go home now?
Modal verb 'können' with omitted 'gehen'.
Mein Vater kommt immer um sechs heim.
My father always comes home at six.
Present tense of 'heimkommen'.
Ich habe vergessen, den Schlüssel heimzunehmen.
I forgot to take the key home.
Infinitive with 'zu': 'heimzunehmen'.
Nach dem Urlaub kehren wir morgen wieder heim.
After the vacation, we are returning home tomorrow.
The verb 'heimkehren' is more formal than 'heimkommen'.
Er hat es ihr endlich heimgezahlt.
He finally paid her back (got revenge).
Idiomatic use of 'heimzahlen'.
Ich leuchte dir mit der Taschenlampe heim.
I'll light your way home with the flashlight.
Literal use of 'heimleuchten'.
Die Vögel fliegen im Herbst nicht heim, sondern in den Süden.
Birds don't fly home in autumn, but to the south.
Contrasting 'heim' with a specific direction.
Es ist Zeit, die Kinder heimzuschicken.
It's time to send the children home.
Separable verb 'heimschicken' in 'zu'-infinitive form.
Wir haben den Weg heim trotz der Dunkelheit gefunden.
We found the way home despite the darkness.
'Heim' used as a directional modifier for 'Weg'.
Der Hund ist von allein heim gelaufen.
The dog ran home on its own.
Perfect tense with 'sein' and 'laufen'.
Kannst du die Einkäufe bitte schon mal heim tragen?
Can you please carry the groceries home already?
Separable verb 'heimtragen'.
Die Soldaten sehnten sich danach, endlich heimzukehren.
The soldiers longed to finally return home.
Reflexive verb 'sich sehnen' followed by 'heimzukehren'.
Nach der Niederlage schlich die Mannschaft enttäuscht heim.
After the defeat, the team crept home disappointed.
Descriptive verb 'schleichen' combined with 'heim'.
Er wollte seine Schulden unbedingt heimzahlen.
He absolutely wanted to pay back his debts.
Literal use of 'heimzahlen' (rare, usually 'zurückzahlen').
Die Katze fand erst nach drei Tagen wieder heim.
The cat only found its way home after three days.
Shortened form of 'heimfinden'.
Ich werde dir diesen Verrat heimzahlen!
I will pay you back for this betrayal!
Common idiomatic usage for revenge.
Die Wanderer machten sich bei Sonnenuntergang heimwärts.
The hikers headed homewards at sunset.
Use of 'heimwärts' as a more formal adverb.
Es ist schwer, nach so vielen Jahren wieder heimzufinden.
It is hard to find one's way home after so many years.
Metaphorical use of 'heimfinden'.
Der Film handelt von einem Jungen, der heim will.
The movie is about a boy who wants to go home.
Modal verb 'will' used as a full verb of motion.
In seinen Gedichten thematisiert er oft das Heimweh und das Verlangen, heimzugehen.
In his poems, he often themes homesickness and the longing to go home.
Literary context using 'heimgehen'.
Die Firma wurde durch die Wirtschaftskrise schwer heimgesucht.
The company was severely afflicted by the economic crisis.
Passive voice with the verb 'heimsuchen' (to afflict/haunt).
Man muss die Feste feiern, wie sie fallen, bevor man heimgeht.
One must celebrate the parties as they come, before one goes home.
Proverbial usage of 'heimgehen'.
Der sterbende Mann wünschte sich nur, in Frieden heimzugehen.
The dying man wished only to go home (pass away) in peace.
Euphemism for death.
Nach dem Skandal wurde der Botschafter sofort heimbeordert.
After the scandal, the ambassador was immediately ordered home.
Official/military term 'heimbeordern'.
Das Schicksal hat ihn mit einer schweren Krankheit heimgesucht.
Fate has afflicted him with a serious illness.
Formal use of 'heimsuchen'.
Sie fühlte sich in der Fremde nie wirklich heimisch.
She never really felt at home (native) in the foreign land.
Adjective 'heimisch' derived from the same root.
Die Rückkehr heim gestaltete sich schwieriger als erwartet.
The return home proved to be more difficult than expected.
'Heim' used as a noun-like adverbial complement.
Die transzendentale Obdachlosigkeit treibt den modernen Menschen dazu, ständig nach einem geistigen 'Heim' zu suchen.
Transcendental homelessness drives modern man to constantly search for a spiritual 'home'.
Philosophical use of the concept.
In der Romantik ist das Motiv des Heimkehrens oft mit dem Tod verknüpft.
In Romanticism, the motif of returning home is often linked with death.
Literary analysis.
Er wurde von den Geistern seiner Vergangenheit heimgesucht.
He was haunted by the ghosts of his past.
Metaphorical use of 'heimsuchen'.
Die Heimtücke des Angriffs überraschte die Verteidiger völlig.
The insidiousness of the attack completely surprised the defenders.
Noun 'Heimtücke' related to the root of 'heim'.
Es ist eine existenzielle Frage, wohin man letztlich heimgehört.
It is an existential question where one ultimately belongs (home).
Complex verb construction 'heimgehören'.
Die Heimführung der sterblichen Überreste erfolgte unter militärischen Ehren.
The return (repatriation) of the mortal remains took place with military honors.
Highly formal noun 'Heimführung'.
Nostalgie ist der Schmerz über die Unmöglichkeit, jemals wirklich heimzukehren.
Nostalgia is the pain over the impossibility of ever truly returning home.
Philosophical definition.
Das Unheimliche ist jenes Vertraute, das durch Verdrängung fremd geworden ist.
The uncanny (un-home-like) is that familiar thing which has become foreign through repression.
Freudian concept of 'das Unheimliche'.
تلازمات شائعة
العبارات الشائعة
— I'm heading home now (casual goodbye).
Tschüss Leute, ich bin dann mal heim.
— Do you want to go home already?
Die Party ist doch super, willst du schon heim?
يُخلط عادةً مع
Daheim means 'at home' (location). Heim means 'to home' (direction).
The noun can mean an institution (nursing home), while the adverb just means the direction.
Heimlich means 'secretly', not 'homely'. It comes from the same root but has a different meaning today.
تعبيرات اصطلاحية
— To tell someone off or give them a piece of your mind.
Wenn er noch einmal lügt, werde ich ihm heimleuchten.
informal— To get revenge on someone.
Seine Gemeinheit werde ich ihm eines Tages heimzahlen.
neutral— To pass away (euphemism).
Nach einem langen Leben ist er friedlich heimgegangen.
elevated— To defeat or eliminate someone (in sports or competition).
Die deutsche Elf hat die Gegner mit 3:0 heimgeschickt.
neutral— To bring something home (often a victory or a prize).
Sie trug den ersten Platz stolz heim.
neutral— Homeless or without a homeland.
Viele Menschen sind durch den Krieg heimatlos geworden.
neutral— To settle in or start feeling at home in a new place.
Es hat ein Jahr gedauert, bis wir hier heimisch wurden.
neutral— The uncanny / the eerie.
Das alte Haus hatte etwas Unheimliches an sich.
literary/psychological— To recall someone (e.g., an official) back to their home country.
Der Diplomat wurde wegen des Skandals heimbeordert.
formalسهل الخلط
Both relate to home.
Daheim is a static location (Wo?). Heim is a direction (Wohin?).
Ich bin daheim. vs. Ich gehe heim.
They mean the same thing.
Nach Hause is more formal/neutral in the North. Heim is more common in the South and in compounds.
Beide sind korrekt: Ich gehe nach Hause / Ich gehe heim.
English 'home' covers both.
Zu Hause is a location. Heim is a direction.
Ich bleibe zu Hause. vs. Ich fahre heim.
Related to home.
Heimatlich means 'native' or 'relating to one's homeland'. Heim is just the direction.
Die heimatlichen Klänge... vs. Wir fahren heim.
Similar spelling.
Geheim means 'secret'. Heim means 'home'.
Das ist ein Geheimnis. vs. Ich will heim.
أنماط الجُمل
Ich gehe [Adverb].
Ich gehe heim.
Wann [Verb] du [Adverb]?
Wann kommst du heim?
Ich muss [Adverb], weil [Nebensatz].
Ich muss heim, weil es regnet.
Nachdem ich [Partizip] war, bin ich [Adverb].
Nachdem ich im Kino war, bin ich heimgefahren.
Es ist [Adjektiv], [Adverb] zu [Verb].
Es ist herrlich, endlich wieder heimzukehren.
[Substantiv] ist die Sehnsucht, [Adverb] zu [Verb].
Heimweh ist die Sehnsucht, endlich heimzugehen.
Kannst du [Objekt] [Adverb] [Verb]?
Kannst du mich heim bringen?
Er hat [Dativ] alles [Adverb]gezahlt.
Er hat es ihm heimgezahlt.
عائلة الكلمة
الأسماء
الأفعال
الصفات
مرتبط
كيفية الاستخدام
Extremely high in daily conversation and sports media.
-
Ich bin heim.
→
Ich bin zu Hause.
Heim implies movement. For a state of being, you need 'zu Hause'.
-
Ich gehe nach heim.
→
Ich gehe heim.
Heim is already an adverb of direction; adding 'nach' is incorrect.
-
Er heimkommt um 5.
→
Er kommt um 5 heim.
Heim- is a separable prefix and must move to the end of the clause.
-
Ich bleibe heim.
→
Ich bleibe zu Hause.
You cannot 'stay' in a direction. Staying requires a location phrase.
-
Das ist mein Heim.
→
Das ist mein Zuhause.
While 'Heim' is a noun, it often sounds institutional. 'Zuhause' is better for a private home.
نصائح
Separable Prefix
Treat 'heim' as a separable prefix. In the present tense, it goes to the end: 'Er kommt heim'.
Modal Shortcut
You can drop the main verb with modals: 'Ich will heim' instead of 'Ich will heimgehen'.
Sports Terms
Look for 'Heim-' in sports news. It always refers to the home team's actions or status.
Regional Choice
Use 'heim' to sound more like a local if you are in Munich, Vienna, or Zurich.
Conciseness
Use 'heim' to make your writing tighter and more energetic than using 'nach Hause'.
Focus on the 'Ei'
The 'ei' sound is distinctive. If you hear 'haim', someone is talking about going home.
Home-Eye-M
Remember the 'eye' sound in 'heim' matches the 'I' in 'I am going home'.
No 'Nach'
Never put 'nach' before 'heim'. It's redundant and sounds wrong to natives.
Emotional Depth
Choose 'heim' when you want to emphasize the feeling of returning to where you belong.
Poetic Touch
Use 'heimwärts' in stories to give the journey home a more romantic or epic feel.
احفظها
وسيلة تذكّر
Think of the English word 'Home'. Just remove the 'o' sound and replace it with 'eye'. H-EYE-M. I'm going H-EYE-M.
ربط بصري
Imagine a bright light shining from a window of a small house at the end of a long, dark road. That light is your 'heim'.
Word Web
تحدٍّ
Try to use 'heim' instead of 'nach Hause' for the next three days whenever you talk about going home. Notice how much faster it feels to say.
أصل الكلمة
From the Middle High German 'heim' and Old High German 'heim'. It is related to the Proto-Germanic '*haimaz', which meant 'village' or 'home'.
المعنى الأصلي: A place where one dwells; a village or a collection of dwellings.
Germanic (Indo-European).السياق الثقافي
Be careful with the noun 'Heim' as it can imply an orphanage or nursing home, which might carry a sad connotation for some.
In English, 'home' is both a noun and an adverb. In German, 'heim' is mostly an adverb. Don't say 'My heim is big' (use 'Zuhause' or 'Heim' as a noun).
تدرّب في الحياة الواقعية
سياقات واقعية
Leaving work
- Ich gehe jetzt heim.
- Wann gehst du heim?
- Ich bin dann mal heim.
- Endlich heimgehen!
Sports
- Wir haben ein Heimspiel.
- Ein klarer Heimsieg.
- Die Fans gehen enttäuscht heim.
- Heimvorteil nutzen.
Travel
- Wann fliegen wir heim?
- Die Heimreise war lang.
- Ich will wieder heim.
- Heimkehren nach dem Urlaub.
Socializing
- Soll ich dich heim bringen?
- Kommst du noch mit heim?
- Ich muss leider schon heim.
- Wie kommst du heim?
Emotional state
- Ich fühle mich hier nicht heimisch.
- Er hat Heimweh.
- Ich will einfach nur heim.
- Sich heim sehnen.
بدايات محادثة
"Wann gehst du heute normalerweise heim?"
"Wie lange brauchst du für den Weg heim?"
"Fährst du über die Feiertage heim zu deiner Familie?"
"Bringst du deine Freunde oft nach einer Party heim?"
"Freust du dich nach einem langen Urlaub darauf, wieder heimzukommen?"
مواضيع للكتابة اليومية
Beschreibe das Gefühl, wenn du nach einem langen Tag endlich heimkommst.
Was bedeutet 'heim' für dich? Ist es ein Ort oder ein Gefühl?
Erzähle von einer Situation, in der du dich weit weg von heim gefühlt hast.
Welche Dinge musst du unbedingt heimnehmen, wenn du verreist?
Denkst du, man kann an mehreren Orten gleichzeitig heim sein?
الأسئلة الشائعة
10 أسئلةNo, in standard German this is incorrect. You should say 'Ich bin zu Hause' or 'Ich bin daheim'. 'Heim' always needs a verb of motion or an implied motion.
It depends on the region. In Southern Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, 'heim' is very common. In Northern Germany, 'nach Hause' is used more often in neutral speech.
It can be both. As an adverb (lowercase), it means 'homewards'. As a noun (uppercase, 'das Heim'), it means 'the home' or often 'the institution'.
'Heimkommen' is everyday language for coming home from work or school. 'Heimkehren' is more formal and often implies returning after a long time or a significant journey.
Usually, yes. But it can also mean your hometown or your home country, depending on the context.
No. You cannot say 'Ich bleibe heim'. You must say 'Ich bleibe zu Hause'.
'Heimwärts' is more specific about the direction ('towards home') and sounds slightly more formal or descriptive.
It originally meant 'belonging to the house', which implied things done in private, and eventually came to mean 'secretly'.
With verbs of motion, use 'sein'. Example: 'Ich bin heimgegangen'. The 'heim' stays attached to the participle.
No. This is a common mistake. Use either 'heim' or 'nach Hause', but never 'nach heim'.
اختبر نفسك 190 أسئلة
Translate to German: 'I am coming home at 6 PM.'
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Write a sentence using 'heimfahren'.
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Translate to German: 'He wants to go home.'
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Use 'heimkehren' in a sentence about a traveler.
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Explain the difference between 'heim' and 'daheim' in German.
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Translate: 'I will pay you back for that!' (as a threat).
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Write a sentence with 'heimgebracht'.
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Translate: 'The birds fly home.'
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Use 'Heimweh' in a sentence.
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Translate: 'Finally home!'
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Write a short dialogue where someone wants to leave a party.
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Translate: 'The team won at home.'
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Use 'heimwärts' in a poetic sentence.
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Translate: 'I forgot my book at home.'
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Write a sentence with 'heimschicken'.
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Translate: 'We are driving home now.'
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Use 'heimisch' in a sentence.
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Translate: 'Can you find the way home?'
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Write a sentence with 'heimgesucht'.
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Translate: 'Are you coming home later?'
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Write a sentence about working from home.
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Translate: 'I have to go home now.'
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Use 'heimgehen' in the perfect tense.
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Translate: 'He escorted her home.'
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Write a sentence using the noun 'das Heim'.
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Say 'I am going home now' in German.
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Ask a friend: 'When are you coming home?'
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Say: 'I must go home.'
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Say: 'I am already at home.'
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Ask: 'Can you bring me home?'
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Say: 'I went home late yesterday.'
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Say: 'Finally home!' with relief.
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Say: 'I want to go home.'
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Say: 'See you, I'm going home now.'
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Say: 'He finds the way home.'
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Say: 'We are driving home.'
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Say: 'I'll pay you back for that!'
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Say: 'Are you coming with me home?'
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Say: 'I feel at home here.'
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Say: 'Go home!'
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Say: 'The dog ran home.'
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Say: 'When does the train go home?'
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Say: 'I'm homesick.'
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Say: 'It's time to go home.'
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Say: 'I'm going home by foot.'
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Listen to the sentence: 'Ich fahre morgen heim.' What is the speaker doing tomorrow?
Listen to: 'Wann kommst du heute heim?' What is being asked?
Listen to: 'Ich bin gestern spät heimgekommen.' When did the person arrive?
Listen to: 'Das werde ich dir heimzahlen.' Is this a friendly sentence?
Listen to: 'Endlich heim!' How does the speaker feel?
Listen to: 'Bringst du mich heim?' What is the request?
Listen to: 'Ich muss heim.' What is missing but implied?
Listen to: 'Er ist friedlich heimgegangen.' What does this mean in a formal context?
Listen to: 'Wir machten uns heimwärts.' What direction were they going?
Listen to: 'Findest du allein heim?' What is the concern?
/ 190 correct
Perfect score!
Summary
The adverb 'heim' is the German equivalent of 'homewards' and is used exclusively for movement toward one's residence. Unlike 'home' in English, it cannot describe being at a location; for that, you must use 'zu Hause'. Example: 'Ich gehe heim' (I am going home).
- Used to indicate direction towards home (homewards).
- Commonly functions as a separable prefix for motion verbs.
- Cannot be used for location; use 'zu Hause' instead.
- Carries emotional weight of returning to safety or roots.
Separable Prefix
Treat 'heim' as a separable prefix. In the present tense, it goes to the end: 'Er kommt heim'.
Modal Shortcut
You can drop the main verb with modals: 'Ich will heim' instead of 'Ich will heimgehen'.
Sports Terms
Look for 'Heim-' in sports news. It always refers to the home team's actions or status.
Regional Choice
Use 'heim' to sound more like a local if you are in Munich, Vienna, or Zurich.
محتوى ذو صلة
تعلّمها في السياق
عبارات ذات صلة
مزيد من كلمات home
abdecken
B1إزالة الأطباق عن الطاولة بعد الأكل؛ تغطية شيء ما لحمايته.
abdichten
B1هو جعل الشيء مقاومًا للماء أو الهواء لمنع التسرب.
Abfalleimer
B1سلة المهملات هي حاوية تستخدم لجمع النفايات والمواد غير المرغوب فيها.
Abfluss
B1drain
abgenutzt
B1شيء مستهلك أو بالٍ بسبب الاستخدام المتكرر.
abhängen
B1إنزال شيء من المكان الذي يعلق فيه.
Ablesen
B1قراءة العداد أو القراءة من ورقة.
abreißen
B1هدم مبنى أو قطع اتصال فجأة. 'سيهدمون المصنع القديم' أو 'انقطع الاتصال بيننا'.
abstauben
B1إزالة الغبار عن سطح ما.
Abstellraum
B1الأبشتلراوم هو مساحة عملية في منزلك لتخزين الأشياء التي لا تحتاجها كل يوم.