German

German word order: the verb-second rule

Build natural German main clauses by keeping the conjugated verb in position two, even when the sentence starts with time or place.

Beginner–IntermediateMain-clause word order Updated June 27, 2026
Short answerIn a German main clause, the conjugated verb normally occupies the second position.
AvoidHeute ich lerne Deutsch.
SayHeute lerne ich Deutsch.

German main clauses have a reliable rhythm: one element first, the conjugated verb second, then the rest.

Heute lerne ich Deutsch. — Today I am learning German.

The first “position” can contain more than one word. Heute Morgen is one time element, so the verb still follows it.

Start with the subject

Start with time or place

When another element moves to the front, the subject moves behind the verb:

English learners often keep the subject before the verb and say Heute ich lerne. German does not need that order. The conjugated verb claims the second position.

Separable verbs still follow the pattern

In Ich stehe um sieben Uhr auf, stehe is in position two and auf moves to the end. If time comes first, the same rule remains:

Um sieben Uhr stehe ich auf.

Think of the verb as an anchor. Once it is in the second position, the rest of the sentence becomes much easier to arrange.