jemand meaning and definition in german

Pronoun
Frequency:







Jemand may or may not take the case endings -em (dative) and -en (accusative). Thus: “Ich suche jemand” and “Ich suche jemanden” are both correct translations of “I'm looking for somebody.” The latter is probably somewhat more common (at least in writing).
With a following adjective, jemand is always uninflected. The adjective itself is capitalized and declined in the strong pattern. It generally uses neuter forms: jemand Neues – "somebody new". In the accusative case it may also take a masculine form: “Ich suche jemand Neuen” alongside “Ich suche jemand Neues.” ("I'm looking for somebody new.") The dative form has -em either way. The genitive case cannot be used with an adjective, but needs to be paraphrased.