German Grammar Topics for Goethe B1: The Complete Checklist and Study Guide

Grammar is tested implicitly in every module of the Goethe-Zertifikat B1 — and explicitly in the Schreiben (Writing) and Sprechen (Speaking) modules where grammatical range and accuracy are scored criteria. This complete grammar checklist covers every structure you need to master for B1, with the most common error patterns and how to fix them.

How Grammar Affects Your B1 Score

ModuleGrammar RoleScore Impact
Lesen (Reading)Understanding verb tenses and clause structures to interpret meaningMedium — needed for inference questions
Horen (Listening)Recognising tenses and modals to understand what happened or is plannedMedium — affects detail comprehension
Schreiben (Writing)Explicit scoring criterion: grammatical accuracy and rangeHigh — 30-40% of writing score
Sprechen (Speaking)Explicit scoring criterion: grammatical structures usedHigh — 25-35% of speaking score

The Complete B1 German Grammar Checklist

1. Verb Tenses – Master These First

TenseFormB1 Requirement
Prasens (Present)Standard conjugation incl. separable verbsMust be automatic — includes strong/irregular verbs
Perfekt (Perfect past)haben/sein + past participleMust know all irregular past participles (gegangen, gesehen, geschrieben…)
Prateritum (Simple past)Used in narrative, writingWar, hatte, wurde, konnte — at minimum for writing tasks
Futur I (Future)werden + infinitiveRequired for writing about plans and predictions
Konjunktiv II (Subjunctive)wurde + inf; ware, hatte, konnte, sollte, durfteEssential for polite requests, hypotheticals, wishes

Most common B1 writing error: using Perfekt for narrative text when Prateritum is expected. In formal and literary writing in German, the Prateritum is used for past narrative. Reserve Perfekt for spoken language and informal correspondence.

2. Modal Verbs – Critical for B1 Writing and Speaking

ModalMeaningB1 Context
mussenMust / have toObligation — Ich muss die Prüfung bestehen
sollenShould / supposed toInstruction or reported speech — Er soll um 9 Uhr kommen
konnenCan / be able toAbility or permission — Kannst du mir helfen?
wollenWant toIntention — Ich will nach Deutschland reisen
dürfenMay / be allowed toPermission — Darf ich rauchen?
mogenLike / mayLiking or formal possibility — Ich mochte einen Kaffee

At B1, modals must be used correctly in all tenses: present (Ich muss), Prateritum (Ich musste), and Konjunktiv II (Ich müsste). Confusing these is a common error in writing tasks.

3. Word Order – The Core of German Grammar

German word order is highly structured. Master these rules:

RuleExampleCommon Error
Verb-second in main clauseMorgen fahre ich nach BerlinPutting verb third: “Morgen ich fahre…”
Subordinate clause — verb at endIch weiß, dass er morgen kommtVerb in middle: “…dass er kommt morgen”
Separable verbs — prefix at endIch rufe dich anPrefix kept attached in main clause
Two-part predicatesEr hat angerufen / Sie wird kommenAuxiliary and main verb separated correctly
Negation with “nicht”Ich verstehe das nichtPlacing nicht too early in the clause

4. Cases – Nominative, Accusative, Dative, Genitive

CaseUseArticles (der/die/das)
NominativeSubject of the sentenceder / die / das / die
AccusativeDirect object; after durch, für, gegen, ohne, umden / die / das / die
DativeIndirect object; after aus, bei, mit, nach, seit, von, zu, gegenüberdem / der / dem / den
GenitivePossession; after wegen, trotz, statt, währenddes / der / des / der

For B1, you must use Nominative, Accusative, and Dative correctly. Genitive is expected passively (recognition in reading) but active production in writing is a bonus.

5. Subordinate Clauses – Essential Connectors

ConjunctionFunctionVerb Position in Subordinate Clause
weil (because)CauseVerb at end — Ich lerne, weil ich die Prufung bestehen will
dass (that)Complement clauseVerb at end — Ich denke, dass es schwer ist
wenn (when/if)Condition or timeVerb at end — Wenn ich Zeit habe, lerne ich
obwohl (although)ConcessionVerb at end — Obwohl es schwer ist, mache ich weiter
damit (so that)PurposeVerb at end — Ich lerne, damit ich bestehe
bevor / nachdemBefore / after — sequenceVerb at end; nachdem usually with Perfekt in sub clause

6. Adjective Endings – A B1 Must

Adjective endings change based on case, gender, and the type of article used. This is a complex but essential B1 skill:

Article TypeNominativeAccusativeDative
Definite (der/die/das)der alte Mann / die alte Frau / das alte Kindden alten Mann / die alte Frau / das alte Kinddem alten Mann / der alten Frau / dem alten Kind
Indefinite (ein/eine)ein alter Mann / eine alte Frau / ein altes Kindeinen alten Mann / eine alte Frau / ein altes Kindeinem alten Mann / einer alten Frau / einem alten Kind
No articlealter Mann / alte Frau / altes Kindalten Mann / alte Frau / altes Kindaltem Mann / alter Frau / altem Kind

Adjective endings are most important in writing tasks. In speaking, small errors are tolerated more — but a pattern of wrong endings suggests a lower level.

7. Passive Voice – B1 Writing Upgrade

Using passive voice (Passiv) in your B1 writing significantly improves your grammatical range score.

Present passive: Das Buch wird gelesen. (The book is being read.)

Past passive: Das Buch wurde gelesen. (The book was read.)

Passive with modal: Das Formular muss ausgefullt werden. (The form must be filled in.) — Very common in formal writing!

B1 Grammar Self-Assessment

AreaTest Yourself
Verb tensesWrite a 100-word story in Prateritum without looking up any forms
Modal verbsWrite 5 sentences using 5 different modals in Konjunktiv II
Word orderRewrite 10 simple sentences adding time phrases at the start
CasesWrite 10 sentences using all four cases with different article types
Subordinate clausesWrite a paragraph using weil, obwohl, damit, und wenn

Take a full Goethe B1 writing mock test on languagetest.in to see your grammar in context. Model answers let you compare your structures directly with the expected B1 standard.

References: Goethe-Institut B1 preparation materials: goethe.de | Hammer’s German Grammar: reference textbook | languagetest.in Goethe B1 grammar practice

Each post reviewed by the languagetest.in research team.

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