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Darfst

Darfst is the second-person singular present tense form of the German modal verb dürfen. Dürfen expresses permission or allowance, as in "Du darfst hier bleiben" (you may stay here). It is a distinct concept from können (ability) and müssen (obligation), and it is commonly used to indicate what is permitted.

Conjugation and related forms: Present tense forms are ich darf, du darfst, er/sie/es darf, wir dürfen, ihr

Usage notes: In main clauses, the conjugated modal verb generally occupies the second position, with the main

Context and scope: Dürfen covers allowances granted by rules, authority, or social norms. It does not express

dürft,
sie/Sie
dürfen.
The
simple
past
is
durfte.
The
past
participle
is
gedurft
and
is
used
with
haben
in
perfect
constructions,
as
in
"Ich
habe
das
tun
dürfen"
(I
have
been
allowed
to
do
that).
verb
in
the
infinitive
placed
at
the
end
when
another
verb
is
present
(Du
darfst
heute
Abend
kommen).
In
subordinate
clauses,
word
order
follows
the
clause
rules,
with
the
infinitive
at
the
end.
For
asking
permission,
the
common
question
form
is
"Darf
ich...?"
For
formal
address,
"Sie
dürfen"
is
used;
"du
darfst"
is
informal
singular.
Negation
forms
include
"du
darfst
nicht"
(you
are
not
allowed
to).
ability
the
way
können
does,
and
it
often
appears
in
social
or
administrative
contexts
where
permission
is
needed
or
granted.
Variants
and
related
verbs
include
the
formal
address
and
related
negations,
making
dürfen
a
frequent,
essential
modal
in
German.