Allemand Hallo!

Learn Allemand with Videos & Interactive Subtitles

Master Allemand from movies, TV shows, and real videos. Click any word for instant translation and pronunciation.

135M+ locuteurs
6 pays
★★☆☆☆ Moyen
Drapeau Allemand

En vedette aujourd'hui

Mot du jour

lange

adverb

Long; for a long time.

En savoir plus

Expression du jour

Die Verfechter dieser These argumentieren, dass

The proponents of this thesis argue that

Littéralement: The fencers (defenders) of this thesis argue that

En savoir plus

Astuce grammaire

Comparing Equality (genauso...wie)

A2 adjectives_adverbs

Use `genauso + [adjective] + wie` to show two things are equal.

En savoir plus

Explore Allemand Learning Resources

Vocabulary, grammar, phrases, and real-life topics — all powered by video immersion

Allemand CEFR Learning Path

Progress from beginner (A1) to advanced (C2) at your own pace

A1 1969
A2 3413
B1 5007
B2 187
C1 24
C2 12

Allemand Videos with Subtitles

2573

Coin culturel

Le savais-tu ?

Touche pour révéler

German is the most widely spoken native language in the European Union.

Tap to close

Le savais-tu ?

Touche pour révéler

German allows compound words of unlimited length, like "Donaudampfschifffahrtsgesellschaftskapitan".

Tap to close

Le savais-tu ?

Touche pour révéler

All German nouns are capitalized, regardless of their position in a sentence.

Tap to close

criture: latin Direction: Gauche à droite Latin alphabet with umlauts (a, o, u) and the Eszett (ss)

Écoutez-le

Deutsch ist die meistgesprochene Muttersprache Europas.

Pratique de la prononciation

Entends-tu la différence ?

vs
vs
vs
vs

4 pronunciation pairs available

Start Learning Allemand for Free Today

Watch movies, TV shows, and real videos with interactive subtitles. Click any word to learn it. Track your progress from A1 to C2.

Allemand Learning FAQ

German is a Category II language, requiring about 750-900 hours of study for English speakers. Its shared Germanic roots with English make vocabulary easier, though grammar cases and word order require dedicated practice.
German grammar features four cases (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive), three genders, and specific word order rules. While structured, these rules are logical and consistent, making them learnable with practice.
German is famous for its compound words, four grammatical cases, capitalized nouns, and verb-final word order in subordinate clauses. It also features separable verbs and a highly logical structure.
Germany has the largest economy in Europe and the 4th largest globally. German is essential for careers in engineering, science, philosophy, and music. It is also a gateway to opportunities in Austria, Switzerland, and Luxembourg.