˿

Using um…zu…

To make your German flow, you can link two clauses by using ܳ...…, which means 'in order to'. This construction is sometimes referred to as the infinitive construction.

In the ܳ...… clause, you must drop the and the verb in the second part of the clause, whatever its tense, and use an instead.

Hilfsvokabeln – Helpful vocabulary

  • anrufen (v) – to ring, to phone
  • stellen (v) – to put (used as eine Frage stellen – to ask a question)
  • die Frage (f) – question
  • die Fragen (pl) – questions
  • ihm (pron) – him, to him (dative or indirect object pronoun)

Here are two sentences that can easily be linked to make one fluent-sounding sentence:

Example one

Ich rufe meinen Freund an. Ich stelle ihm eine Frage. – I ring my friend. I ask him a question.

  • You're going to link the two sentences together. As you already have a subject in the first sentence (ich), you can now drop the subject (ich) in the second sentence.
  • Replace the verb in the second sentence - here the first person singular form stelle - with the infinitive form stellen.
  • In German, the comma matters as it separates the two ideas.

Both sentences can now be linked like this:

Ich rufe meinen Freund an, um ihm eine Frage zu stellen. – I ring my friend in order to ask him a question.

Example two

Wir warten auf den Bus. Wir fahren in die Stadt. – We are waiting for the bus. We are going into town.

  • Drop the subject (wir) in the second sentence.
  • Replace the verb in the second sentence - here the first person plural form fahren - with the infinitive. The infinitive form fahren happens to look the same in this particular case.
  • Use a comma to separate the two separate ideas.

This now gives us the following sentence:

Wir warten auf den Bus, um in die Stadt zu fahren. – We are waiting for the bus in order to go in to town.

A comma between the words idea and idea in German to show how it separates two grammatical ideas.