Random Common German Nouns Quiz #2

Type the English translation of these common German nouns. 50 nouns are listed every time you play, out of a total of 100. The nouns and their order change every time!
Answer must correspond to highlighted box!
Try to give the most common translations
Note: the accepted translations for each noun may not be the only valid ones
Quiz by
JackintheBox
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Last updated: March 30, 2022
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First submittedNovember 26, 2019
Times taken103
Average score70.0%
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German
English
die Person
person
das Zentrum
centre
der Onkel
uncle
der Staat
state, country
der Fels
rock
das Schild
sign, number plate, nameplate
der Sinn
sense
die Wohnung
flat, apartment
der Zahn
tooth
die Macht
power
der Fall
case, fall
die Haut
skin
die Dame
lady
die Stille
quiet, silence
der Himmel
sky, heaven
der Sommer
summer
die Mama
mum
die Kiste
box
der Hals
neck
die Spitze
point, tip, top
der Nachmittag
afternoon
die Erde
earth, soil, ground
die Party
party
das Gefühl
feeling, sensation
das Pferd
horse
der Stein
stone
das Recht
law, right
der Schatten
shadow, shade
der Bildschirm
screen
die Menge
quantity, large number (of), crowd
die Nase
nose
die Musik
music
der Bahnhof
railway station
die Rast
rest
die Aufmerksamkeit
attention
der Krieg
war
der Schmerz
pain
der Brief
letter
das Ohr
ear
der Doktor
doctorate, doctor
der Fluss
river
das Tier
animal
die Halle
hall
der Traum
dream
der Vater
father
die Farbe
colour
die Katze
cat
das Land
country
der Kaffee
coffee
der Vogel
bird
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4 Comments
+1
Level 82
Nov 26, 2019
The source from which I got these nouns is far from perfect. It sometimes gives the wrong gender for the German noun, and it is almost perfectly clear that the author must have got the German word and translated it into English via Google Translate. While this might not seem too bad, it is also almost certain that he then added an 's' or 'es' to end of the English words, then translated those to German via Google Translate, so that the German 'plural form' of each noun often greatly differs from the singular form.
+1
Level 82
Nov 26, 2019
For instance, the word for 'tear' in German was given as 'die Reiß' - the translation is incorrect, as 'reiß' is the root form of 'reißen', which is the verb that means 'tear', as in 'pull something apart by force'. The correct German noun for that sense of 'tear' should be 'der Riss' - the noun is masculine (and thus uses 'der'), not feminine. The author then found the 'plural' for the word by adding an 's' to the English word 'tear' and translating it via Google Translate, which gave 'Tränen', meaning 'tears' as in 'teardrops'.
+1
Level 82
Nov 26, 2019
That is just one example of the wealth of errors present in the list. Still, I believe it is a good source for commonly-used German nouns (I'm not sure where the author got these nouns from though, or if he actually found a list of common English words, then translated them into singular and plural forms in German separately (via Google Translate). A particularly bizarre instance is noun #215 - 'die Lebenden', translated as '(the) living' in English. I don't know what the author was thinking - he must added an 's' after 'living' (thus producing 'livings'), then translated it to give the German plural 'die Livings', which makes no sense and does not exist in the German language.
+1
Level 82
Nov 26, 2019
That's why I always check whether the given gender of each noun is correct and the definitions of each noun if I am not sure, and also to find multiple definitions. Note that many of these German words have multiple definitions and therefore and be translated to multiple words in English. I decide to accept only the most popular translation with the addition of perhaps (usually) one or two more if that German noun is commonly used to refer to those words in English. I may also accept some common synonyms. However, if I find that some English translations are more often referred to in German by some other term, then those translations are not accepted. For instance, I accept 'ground' and 'reason' for 'der Grund', but not 'bottom', as the latter word is more commonly referred to by 'der Boden'.