aimnova.
DashboardMy LearningPaper MasteryStudy Plan

Stay in the loop

Study tips, product updates, and early access to new features.

aimnova.

AI-powered IB study platform with personalised plans, instant feedback, and examiner-style marking.

IB Subjects
  • All IB Subjects
  • IB Diploma
  • IB ESS
  • IB Economics
  • IB Business Management
  • IB Math AI
  • IB Math AA
  • IB Physics
  • IB Spanish B
  • IB German B
Question Banks
  • ESS Question Bank
  • Economics Question Bank
  • Business Management Question Bank
  • Math AI Question Bank
  • Math AA Question Bank
  • Physics Question Bank
  • Spanish B Question Bank
  • German B Question Bank
Predicted Topics 2026
  • ESS Predictions 2026
  • Economics Predictions 2026
  • Business Management Predictions 2026
  • Math AI Predictions 2026
  • Math AA Predictions 2026
  • Physics Predictions 2026
  • Spanish B Predictions 2026
  • German B Predictions 2026

Study Resources

  • Free Study Notes
  • Mock Exams
  • Revision Guide
  • Flashcards
  • Exam Skills
  • Command Terms
  • Past Paper Feedback
  • Grade Calculator
  • Exam Timetable 2026

Company

  • Features
  • Pricing
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Cookies

© 2026 Aimnova. All rights reserved.

Made with 💜 for IB students worldwide

v0.1.1236
NotesGerman B HLTopic 3.4Personal & reflexive pronouns
Back to German B HL Topics
3.4.33 min read

Personal & reflexive pronouns

IB German B • Unit 3

AI-powered feedback

Stop guessing — know where you lost marks

Get instant, examiner-style feedback on every answer. See exactly how to improve and what the markscheme expects.

Try It Free

Contents

  • What it is
  • The forms
  • When which case
  • In action
  • Common errors
Personal & reflexive pronouns: A personal pronoun replaces a noun so you don't repeat it: instead of „Anna ruft Anna“ you say „Anna ruft sie“. In German the pronoun changes with its case — subject (Nominativ: ich), direct object (Akkusativ: mich) or indirect object (Dativ: mir). A reflexive pronoun is used when the subject and the object are the same person: „Ich wasche mich“ (I wash myself). This micro teaches both sets and when to use each form.
das Personalpronomen
personal pronoun — ich, du, er/sie/es, wir, ihr, sie/Sie (and their object forms)
das Reflexivpronomen
reflexive pronoun — mich, dich, sich, uns, euch, sich (subject acts on itself)
der Nominativ
the subject case — who is doing it: «ich», «du», «er»
der Akkusativ
the direct-object case — whom/what: «mich», «dich», «ihn»
der Dativ
the indirect-object case — to whom: «mir», «dir», «ihm»
das reflexive Verb
reflexive verb — built with a reflexive pronoun: «sich freuen», «sich waschen»
Why it matters: Pronouns appear in every German sentence you write or say. Picking the wrong case — „Er hilft mich“ instead of „Er hilft mir“ — is one of the most common slips and costs accuracy marks. Getting mich/mir and dich/dir right makes your German sound natural.
Personal pronouns across the cases: Each personal pronoun has three forms — one per case. Learn the table by rows: ich → mich → mir, du → dich → dir, and so on. The Nominativ is the doer, the Akkusativ is the direct object, the Dativ is the indirect object (usually 'to/for someone').
Nominativ (subject)Akkusativ (direct obj.)Dativ (indirect obj.)
ich (I)mich (me)mir (to me)
du (you, sing.)dich (you)dir (to you)
er (he)ihn (him)ihm (to him)
sie (she)sie (her)ihr (to her)
es (it)es (it)ihm (to it)
wir (we)uns (us)uns (to us)
ihr (you, pl.)euch (you)euch (to you)
sie / Sie (they / you formal)sie / Sieihnen / Ihnen (to them / to you)
Reflexive pronouns: Reflexives match the personal Akkusativ forms except in the 3rd person and the formal Sie, where the single word „sich“ covers er/sie/es, plural sie, and Sie. Note mir/dir appear when the reflexive is in the Dativ (e.g. «ich wasche mir die Hände»).
PersonReflexiv (Akkusativ)Reflexiv (Dativ)
ichmichmir
dudichdir
er/sie/essichsich
wirunsuns
ihreucheuch
sie / Siesichsich
The handy shortcut: Only ich and du differ between Akkusativ and Dativ in the reflexive set: mich/mir and dich/dir. Everyone else uses the same word in both (sich, uns, euch). So 90% of the work is just remembering mich vs mir and dich vs dir.

Feeling unprepared for exams?

Get a clear study plan, practice with real questions, and know exactly where you stand before exam day. No more guessing.

Get Exam Ready Free7-day free trial • No card required
A quick decision guide: To pick the right pronoun, ask what job it does in the sentence. Is it the doer → Nominativ. Is it the person/thing directly affected → Akkusativ. Is it the person to/for whom something is done → Dativ. For reflexives, ask whether there is another direct object in the sentence.

Welcher Fall?

  • Is it the subject (the doer)? → Nominativ — „Ich komme.“ (I'm coming.)
  • Is it the direct object (whom/what)? → Akkusativ — „Sie ruft mich.“ (She calls me.)
  • Is it to/for someone (indirect)? → Dativ — „Er hilft mir.“ (He helps me.)
  • Reflexive with no other object? → Akkusativ reflexive — „Ich wasche mich.“ (I wash myself.)
  • Reflexive plus a direct object (e.g. a body part)? → Dativ reflexive — „Ich wasche mir die Hände.“ (I wash my hands.)
The Dativ-verb trap: Some common verbs always take the Dativ, even though English feels like a direct object: helfen (to help), danken (to thank), gefallen (to please), gehören (to belong). So it's „Ich helfe dir“ / „Das gefällt mir“ — never „mich“. Memorise these verbs as 'Dativ verbs'.
Pronouns in a short routine: Here's a short paragraph that uses personal and reflexive pronouns together. For each one, notice its case — subject, direct object, indirect object, or reflexive. Read it for the meaning, then tap Übersetzung anzeigen for the English or 🔊 to hear it.

Pronomen in Aktion

Ein Tagesablauf, Satz für Satz

  1. Morgens wache ich früh auf und ich wasche mich schnell.
  2. Meine Schwester ruft mich, weil sie mir beim Frühstück hilft.
  3. Wir freuen uns auf die Schule, und unsere Lehrerin begrüßt uns am Tor.
  4. Am Abend putze ich mir die Zähne und ich lese ihnen eine Geschichte vor.
  5. Erinnerst du dich an deine Freunde? Ich schreibe ihnen jeden Tag.
Steal this for your writing: Notice the pairs: Akkusativ object („ruft mich“), Dativ object („hilft mir“, „schreibe ihnen“), reflexive Akkusativ („wasche mich“, „freuen uns“) and reflexive Dativ + body part („putze mir die Zähne“). Drop a couple of these into your essay to show real control of pronouns.

Memorize terms 3x faster

Smart flashcards show you cards right before you forget them. Perfect for definitions and key concepts.

Try Flashcards Free7-day free trial • No card required
The slips to watch for: Most mistakes are case mix-ups — using the Akkusativ where the verb needs the Dativ (especially after helfen, danken, gefallen), or using „sich“ for ich/du/wir/ihr in a reflexive. Compare the right version with the typical mistake and the fix becomes obvious.

Richtig

  • Er hilft mir.
  • Wir freuen uns auf das Wochenende.
  • Ich wasche mir die Hände.

Häufiger Fehler

  • Er hilft mich.
  • Wir freuen sich auf das Wochenende.
  • Ich wasche mich die Hände.
Ask: what job does it do?: Before you write a pronoun, ask one thing: is it the doer (Nominativ), the direct object (Akkusativ) or to/for someone (Dativ)? And memorise the Dativ verbs — helfen, danken, gefallen, gehören — they always take mir/dir/ihm/ihr/uns/euch/ihnen, never the Akkusativ.

Try an IB Exam Question — Free AI Feedback

Test yourself on Personal & reflexive pronouns. Write your answer and get instant AI feedback — just like a real IB examiner.

Korrigiere den Pronomenfehler: „Er hilft mich.“ und „Das Buch gehört mich.“ Schreibe die richtige Version. [2 marks]

Related German B HL Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

3.1.1Present: regular verbs
3.1.2Present: irregular & stem-changing verbs
3.1.3Separable & inseparable verbs
3.1.4Modal verbs
View all German B HL topics

Improve your exam technique

Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for German B HL

Previous
3.4.2Dative & Genitive cases
Next
Adjective endings, comparatives & superlatives3.4.4

15 practice questions on Personal & reflexive pronouns

Students who practiced this topic on Aimnova scored 82% on average. Try free practice questions and get instant AI feedback.

Try 3 Free QuestionsView All German B HL Topics