Why dativ case for the verb widerspricht?Schreibst du einen Brief an deinen Vater?Should one necessarily...

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Why dativ case for the verb widerspricht?


Schreibst du einen Brief an deinen Vater?Should one necessarily learn, when a verb goes with a dative object and when with accusative one?What are some rules governing the nominal cases in German?“Willst du der Schülerin helfen?” why dative case “der Schülerin” but not “die Schülerin”?Why are the first parts of these sentences not in nominative case?Sign of the Cross – case of “Im Namen”Cases with multiple objectsPerson vs Thing for determining case?General rule/s for finding out whether an object is accusative or dativeWhy is “Tisch” in “Der Apfel liegt auf dem Tisch” in dative instead of accusative case?













1















Der Vater widerspricht dem Sohn.



Why does "der Sohn" get dative case here? And not the accusative case? To me, the son seems to be the direct object.










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    1















    Der Vater widerspricht dem Sohn.



    Why does "der Sohn" get dative case here? And not the accusative case? To me, the son seems to be the direct object.










    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    Kwiebes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1








      Der Vater widerspricht dem Sohn.



      Why does "der Sohn" get dative case here? And not the accusative case? To me, the son seems to be the direct object.










      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      Kwiebes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      Der Vater widerspricht dem Sohn.



      Why does "der Sohn" get dative case here? And not the accusative case? To me, the son seems to be the direct object.







      grammatical-case






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      Kwiebes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question







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      share|improve this question




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      asked 3 hours ago









      KwiebesKwiebes

      82




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          2 Answers
          2






          active

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          3














          Yes, "der Sohn" is the direct object of the sentence - but it's not in the accusative.



          This is one of quite some possible examples where "direct object == accusative" is not true and shows you shouldn't assume such a congruence.



          Many German verbs that express opposition through "wider-" and "gegen-" prefixes rule the dative.




          • widersprechen

          • gegenüberstehen

          • entgegengehen

          • widersetzen

          • ...






          share|improve this answer
























          • Another possible fit for this list is antworten.

            – Carsten S
            1 hour ago











          • Also helfen, danken, dienen, etc. etc. etc.

            – Janka
            1 hour ago



















          1














          German doesn't have the concept of direct and indirect objects. It does have accusative objects, dative objects and even genitive objects.



          Wiedersprechen takes a dative object






          share|improve this answer
























          • It's not quite true that German doesn't have the concept of direct/indirect objects - It is simply not useful to derive the case from that concept, because in German it's a semantical concept only, and not necessarily a grammatical one.

            – tofro
            2 hours ago











          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3














          Yes, "der Sohn" is the direct object of the sentence - but it's not in the accusative.



          This is one of quite some possible examples where "direct object == accusative" is not true and shows you shouldn't assume such a congruence.



          Many German verbs that express opposition through "wider-" and "gegen-" prefixes rule the dative.




          • widersprechen

          • gegenüberstehen

          • entgegengehen

          • widersetzen

          • ...






          share|improve this answer
























          • Another possible fit for this list is antworten.

            – Carsten S
            1 hour ago











          • Also helfen, danken, dienen, etc. etc. etc.

            – Janka
            1 hour ago
















          3














          Yes, "der Sohn" is the direct object of the sentence - but it's not in the accusative.



          This is one of quite some possible examples where "direct object == accusative" is not true and shows you shouldn't assume such a congruence.



          Many German verbs that express opposition through "wider-" and "gegen-" prefixes rule the dative.




          • widersprechen

          • gegenüberstehen

          • entgegengehen

          • widersetzen

          • ...






          share|improve this answer
























          • Another possible fit for this list is antworten.

            – Carsten S
            1 hour ago











          • Also helfen, danken, dienen, etc. etc. etc.

            – Janka
            1 hour ago














          3












          3








          3







          Yes, "der Sohn" is the direct object of the sentence - but it's not in the accusative.



          This is one of quite some possible examples where "direct object == accusative" is not true and shows you shouldn't assume such a congruence.



          Many German verbs that express opposition through "wider-" and "gegen-" prefixes rule the dative.




          • widersprechen

          • gegenüberstehen

          • entgegengehen

          • widersetzen

          • ...






          share|improve this answer













          Yes, "der Sohn" is the direct object of the sentence - but it's not in the accusative.



          This is one of quite some possible examples where "direct object == accusative" is not true and shows you shouldn't assume such a congruence.



          Many German verbs that express opposition through "wider-" and "gegen-" prefixes rule the dative.




          • widersprechen

          • gegenüberstehen

          • entgegengehen

          • widersetzen

          • ...







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 2 hours ago









          tofrotofro

          43.5k145131




          43.5k145131













          • Another possible fit for this list is antworten.

            – Carsten S
            1 hour ago











          • Also helfen, danken, dienen, etc. etc. etc.

            – Janka
            1 hour ago



















          • Another possible fit for this list is antworten.

            – Carsten S
            1 hour ago











          • Also helfen, danken, dienen, etc. etc. etc.

            – Janka
            1 hour ago

















          Another possible fit for this list is antworten.

          – Carsten S
          1 hour ago





          Another possible fit for this list is antworten.

          – Carsten S
          1 hour ago













          Also helfen, danken, dienen, etc. etc. etc.

          – Janka
          1 hour ago





          Also helfen, danken, dienen, etc. etc. etc.

          – Janka
          1 hour ago











          1














          German doesn't have the concept of direct and indirect objects. It does have accusative objects, dative objects and even genitive objects.



          Wiedersprechen takes a dative object






          share|improve this answer
























          • It's not quite true that German doesn't have the concept of direct/indirect objects - It is simply not useful to derive the case from that concept, because in German it's a semantical concept only, and not necessarily a grammatical one.

            – tofro
            2 hours ago
















          1














          German doesn't have the concept of direct and indirect objects. It does have accusative objects, dative objects and even genitive objects.



          Wiedersprechen takes a dative object






          share|improve this answer
























          • It's not quite true that German doesn't have the concept of direct/indirect objects - It is simply not useful to derive the case from that concept, because in German it's a semantical concept only, and not necessarily a grammatical one.

            – tofro
            2 hours ago














          1












          1








          1







          German doesn't have the concept of direct and indirect objects. It does have accusative objects, dative objects and even genitive objects.



          Wiedersprechen takes a dative object






          share|improve this answer













          German doesn't have the concept of direct and indirect objects. It does have accusative objects, dative objects and even genitive objects.



          Wiedersprechen takes a dative object







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 2 hours ago









          PiedPiperPiedPiper

          3,341626




          3,341626













          • It's not quite true that German doesn't have the concept of direct/indirect objects - It is simply not useful to derive the case from that concept, because in German it's a semantical concept only, and not necessarily a grammatical one.

            – tofro
            2 hours ago



















          • It's not quite true that German doesn't have the concept of direct/indirect objects - It is simply not useful to derive the case from that concept, because in German it's a semantical concept only, and not necessarily a grammatical one.

            – tofro
            2 hours ago

















          It's not quite true that German doesn't have the concept of direct/indirect objects - It is simply not useful to derive the case from that concept, because in German it's a semantical concept only, and not necessarily a grammatical one.

          – tofro
          2 hours ago





          It's not quite true that German doesn't have the concept of direct/indirect objects - It is simply not useful to derive the case from that concept, because in German it's a semantical concept only, and not necessarily a grammatical one.

          – tofro
          2 hours ago










          Kwiebes is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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