A1 Collocation 중립

Eine Melodie spielen

to play a melody

To perform a musical tune on an instrument.

🌍

문화적 배경

The 'Blockflöte' (recorder) is often the first instrument German children learn to play a melody on in primary school. Vienna is the world capital of music. Playing a melody there often carries the weight of centuries of classical tradition. The Alphorn is a traditional Swiss instrument used to play long, echoing melodies across the mountains. On platforms like TikTok, 'playing a melody' is often part of challenges where users try to replicate famous tunes.

💡

Gender Tip

Remember that almost all musical terms ending in -ie are feminine in German (Melodie, Harmonie, Sinfonie).

⚠️

Verb Choice

Never use 'machen' for playing an instrument. It's a classic 'Anglicism' that sounds wrong to native ears.

To perform a musical tune on an instrument.

💡

Gender Tip

Remember that almost all musical terms ending in -ie are feminine in German (Melodie, Harmonie, Sinfonie).

⚠️

Verb Choice

Never use 'machen' for playing an instrument. It's a classic 'Anglicism' that sounds wrong to native ears.

🎯

Instrument Preposition

Always use 'auf' for instruments. Think of yourself playing 'on' the surface of the keys or strings.

💬

Politeness

If you want to ask someone to play, 'Würdest du uns etwas vorspielen?' is a very warm and common way to phrase it.

셀프 테스트

Fill in the correct article and verb form.

Ich ______ ______ Melodie auf der Geige.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: a

The subject 'Ich' requires the verb form 'spiele', and 'Melodie' is feminine (eine).

Which sentence is correct?

How do you say 'Can you play a melody?'

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: b

'Spielen' is the correct verb for instruments; 'machen' is incorrect, and 'singen' is for the voice.

Match the German phrase with its English translation.

Match the following:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: 0-3, 1-4, 2-5

These are standard musical collocations.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Was machst du in deiner Freizeit? B: Ich ______ gerne ______ Melodien auf meiner Gitarre.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: a

'Spiele' fits the context of playing an instrument, and 'kleine' is a valid adjective for melodies.

🎉 점수: /4

시각 학습 자료

Instruments (auf + dative)

🎹

Keyboard

  • dem Klavier
  • dem Keyboard
🎻

Strings

  • der Geige
  • der Gitarre

연습 문제 은행

4 연습 문제
Fill in the correct article and verb form. Fill Blank A1

Ich ______ ______ Melodie auf der Geige.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: a

The subject 'Ich' requires the verb form 'spiele', and 'Melodie' is feminine (eine).

Which sentence is correct? Choose A1

How do you say 'Can you play a melody?'

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: b

'Spielen' is the correct verb for instruments; 'machen' is incorrect, and 'singen' is for the voice.

Match the German phrase with its English translation. Match A1

왼쪽의 각 항목을 오른쪽의 짝과 연결하세요:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: 0-3, 1-4, 2-5

These are standard musical collocations.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: Was machst du in deiner Freizeit? B: Ich ______ gerne ______ Melodien auf meiner Gitarre.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: a

'Spiele' fits the context of playing an instrument, and 'kleine' is a valid adjective for melodies.

🎉 점수: /4

자주 묻는 질문

10 질문

No, for the radio you use 'laufen' (Die Musik läuft) or 'anmachen' (Ich mache das Radio an).

Yes, '{die|f} Melodie' is always feminine, so it's always 'eine Melodie' or 'die Melodie'.

A 'Lied' (song) usually has words. A 'Melodie' is just the sequence of musical notes.

Yes, that is correct and very common for general playing.

You say 'Ich habe eine Melodie gespielt'.

Usually, you say 'eine Melodie pfeifen' for whistling.

It is 'auf dem Klavier'.

It's possible, but 'auf der Gitarre' is much more common.

It's a melody that you can't stop playing in your head!

DJs usually 'legen auf' (records) or 'spielen ein Set'.

관련 표현

🔗

ein Instrument spielen

builds on

To play an instrument

🔗

ein Lied singen

contrast

To sing a song

🔗

Noten lesen

similar

To read music

🔗

im Takt bleiben

similar

To stay in time

🔗

begleiten

specialized form

To accompany

도움이 되었나요?
아직 댓글이 없습니다. 첫 번째로 생각을 공유하세요!