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German Vocabulary List

Use the German vocabulary list to review words by level, hear pronunciation, and connect vocabulary to lessons and quizzes.

How to use a German vocabulary list correctly

A German vocabulary list is most useful when every word has a level, a clear English meaning, a Bangla meaning when needed, an example sentence, and a way to practice it. Random word lists are easy to scroll but hard to remember. A structured list lets learners filter by A1, A2, B1, and higher levels so the words match their current grammar.

Start with high-frequency words for daily life: greetings, people, food, transport, time, home, school, work, and common verbs. Then connect each word to a sentence. For example, der Bus is more useful when learned with Der Bus kommt um acht Uhr and Ich nehme den Bus zur Arbeit.

Vocabulary needs pronunciation and context

German words should not be learned silently only. Learners need to hear the word, repeat it, and notice the article or verb pattern around it. Pronunciation is especially important for vowels, word endings, and sounds like ch, sch, ä, ö, ü, and ß.

Context also prevents wrong meanings. A word can change meaning depending on the phrase. The vocabulary route links into lessons, quiz practice, and search so a learner can move from one word into examples and related grammar immediately.

Review words with active recall

Reading a list once is not enough. Use spaced repetition, quizzes, writing prompts, and speaking drills. Try to answer before looking at the translation, then use the example sentence to check whether the word feels natural.

A strong routine is simple: learn ten words, listen to five, write three sentences, and speak two sentences aloud. That turns vocabulary from passive recognition into usable German.

Build vocabulary by topic instead of alphabet only

Alphabetical lists are useful for lookup, but learners remember words better when the list is grouped by life situation. A1 should include greetings, family, food, home, time, numbers, transport, school, work, and shopping. A2 can add appointments, health, travel, weather, hobbies, and simple opinions. B1 should include work problems, education, housing, plans, news, and reasons.

Topic grouping also helps internal linking. A food word can link to a shopping lesson, a speaking prompt, and a quiz. A transport word can link to listening practice with station announcements or direction phrases. This makes the vocabulary list a learning hub instead of a passive table.

What every vocabulary entry should include

A useful German vocabulary entry needs the German word, English meaning, Bangla meaning when helpful, level, example sentence, and related practice. For nouns, the article is essential because der, die, and das affect later grammar. For verbs, learners need the infinitive and examples that show how the verb changes in a real sentence.

The meaning must be precise. For example, a comparative form should not be reduced to the base adjective. Schlimmere means worse, not simply bad. Accurate meaning protects learners from building wrong sentences and makes the page more trustworthy for search visitors.

How to turn 100 German words into real skill

If you study 100 words, do not try to use all of them in one day. Divide them into ten-word groups. For each group, read the meanings, listen or speak the example sentences, and then answer a quiz. The next day, review the same ten words before adding another group.

The goal is not to finish the list quickly. The goal is to remember words when you need them in speaking, listening, and writing. Use the linked vocabulary catalog, lessons, search tool, and quiz practice to make each word appear in more than one context.

Related links

Continue into connected lessons and practice instead of stopping on one article.

Trust signals

The platform is built for long-term learning and Google-safe growth, not thin pages or locked content.

Free German learning platform

Grammar, vocabulary, lessons, practice, and tools remain accessible without a paywall.

A1-C2 structured system

Learning pages are connected by level, topic, examples, and practice actions.

Helpful content only

SEO pages link to real study routes and avoid duplicate, automated, or spam-style content.

FAQ

Short answers for learners and search engines before moving into practice.

How many German words should beginners learn first?

Start with 300 to 500 high-frequency A1 and A2 words, then expand by topic as your grammar and listening improve.

Should German nouns be learned with articles?

Yes. Learn der, die, or das with every noun whenever possible because articles affect case, adjective endings, and natural sentence building.

What is the best way to review vocabulary?

Use active recall: hide the meaning, answer first, check the example, then write or say a new sentence with the word.

TranslateOpen the German, English, and Bangla translator.
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