Question about the reflexive pronoun "sich"?

I have the following questions about the reflexive pronoun "sich" in the accusative case.

It concerns the following sentences:

1) She knows herself.

2) She sees herself.

3) She wonders.

Why is the "sich" in the accusative case and not the dative case?

ie How can you tell them apart?

I want to determine the sentence parts.

Which part of the sentence would be "sich" and how do you ask about it?

(1 votes)
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MinusDrei651
4 months ago

Hello OnlyMathe7

the battery gives the connection between an action, and to whom this action is aimed.

The tripod, on the other hand, shows who or whom this action is carried out

See + Battery

Because the action is aimed at the object “ich”. “I see on (m)ich”

Questions + battery

Also a question is addressed to someone

Sunbeds + preposition+ Dativ

I’m doing something, so there’s something happening to the object.

I’m lying on the couch

The couch is occupied by me

So the couch does something through my action

I’m on my side

Loves + battery

My love is aimed at someone or something – but this does not happen to the object as long as I love and the person is not loved by me 😅

I love you, you.

You are loved by me – Dativ. “Euch happens my love” 😅

LG

jsch1964
4 months ago

Dative and rechargeable are sometimes difficult to keep apart.

Dativ: Who is that? Who likes that?

Battery: Who or what do I see? Who cares?

Spielwiesen
4 months ago

Question about reflexive pronouns “sich”?

The case is controlled by the verb. On know – see – ask follows the ==>

Test: Who knows them? who does she see? Who is she asking? ==> Answer: ==>Rechargeable.

Sets: ‘She knows’

  • You = subject;
  • know = predicate;
  • and = battery object (reflexive pronouns)

Test question: Who you know?

Answer: and

Like the other verbs.

spanferkel14
4 months ago

know, see, ask + AKKUSATIV. That’s why!

Chrisi614
4 months ago

Dativ asks who or what,Akkusativ wen or what…

MinusDrei651
4 months ago
Reply to  Chrisi614

So Dativ asks what and rechargeable what – so both ask for the same…

Who and who are the same they differ from the case so you have to know the case before you know what to ask – if you already know the case, you don’t have to ask for it anymore…

Those who ask who serve only the native speaker who has internalized all the rules and needs nothing to learn.

DaKaBo
4 months ago

I just answered your previous question.

Why is this “sich” in the battery and not in the Dativ?

Because you ask for “wen” here, not for “wem.

What is the text of the text?

It belongs to the reflexive verb, that is, predicate.