Master German Vocabulary | 12,207 Vocab Items (A1–C1) | English & Arabic

By Sneferu

Tags: Learn German, German Vocabulary, Goethe Exam, Menschen, Aspekte Neu, German A1, German A2, German B1, German B2, German C1

A complete German vocabulary deck covering 12,207 vocab items from beginner (A1) to advanced (C1), based on official word lists from the “Menschen” (A1–B1) and “Aspekte Neu” (B2–C1) textbook series, the same curriculum used at the Goethe-Institut.

Perfect for all German learners, whether you’re preparing for Goethe exams, or looking for a structured, comprehensive source of German vocabulary, combined with Anki’s spaced repetition, this deck can be your go-to tool to achieve your German learning goals.

Includes three versions in one download:

  • English translation deck
  • Arabic translation deck
  • Bilingual (English + Arabic) deck

Each version is organized into levels, levels divided into chapters, and chapters into vocabulary groups, following the original sources. The deck is bidirectional, for each word, you’ll learn:

  • German → Translation
  • Translation → German

That’s 24,414 total cards, ideal for active, long-term recall.

The deck includes:

  • Natural German audio pronunciation for all vocabulary.
  • Articles and plural forms for all nouns.
  • Extra info where available, example sentences are frequent in B2 and C1, verb forms in different tenses almost always included there as well.

Once purchased, you get free lifetime updates (planned: more translation languages).

German Compound Words for Beginners

By Jen_Bjornstad

Tags: german

German Compound Words for Beginners, created by Jen Bjornstad, PhD, is an Anki deck for brand-new learners of German or for anyone interested in languages and how they work.

The deck is made up of 80 compound nouns in German that are easy and fun for speakers of English to guess, for example, die Sonnenblume (sunflower), der Eisbär (polar bear), die Milchstraße (Milky Way).

By studying these words, you’ll learn the basic nouns the compounds are made up of: die Blume (flower), der Bär (bear), die Straße (street). You’ll also get a sense of how German compounds are created, and you’ll start to see patterns in the ways German and English are related to each other.

Note: If you’re interested in using this deck for teaching purposes, visit my Teachers Pay Teachers store for related materials.

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