Home

Kannst

Kannst is the second-person singular present tense form of the German modal verb können. It means "you can" or "you are able to" and is used to express ability, possibility, or permission in informal address. The infinitive is können, and the other present-tense forms are ich kann, er kann, wir können, ihr könnt, sie können. Kannst is commonly used with another verb in the infinitive to indicate an action the subject is able to perform, as in Du kannst kommen (You can come).

In questions, kannst is placed at the beginning: Kannst du mir helfen? In statements, it appears after

Semantics and usage: kann/kannst implies ability or possibility. It is distinct from dürfen, which expresses permission

Pronunciation: kannst is pronounced roughly as kahnst, with a clear short a and a final cluster -nst.

Etymology and classification: Kannst is part of the Germanic family of modal verbs built from können, whose

the
subject:
Du
kannst
heute
Abend
kommen.
The
negation
is
formed
with
nicht:
Du
kannst
nicht
kommen,
or
with
kein
when
negating
a
noun
phrase:
Du
kannst
keinen
Kaffee
trinken,
depending
on
the
context.
more
than
capability.
For
example,
Du
kannst
gehen
means
you
are
able
to
go
(or
you
may
go
in
a
permissive
sense
depending
on
context),
whereas
Du
darfst
gehen
focuses
more
on
permission
granted
by
someone
else.
Kannst
is
also
used
in
hypothetical
or
conditional
contexts
with
related
constructions.
forms
trace
back
to
Proto-Germanic
kunnan-.
As
a
highly
frequent
verb
form,
kannst
appears
across
a
wide
range
of
registers,
from
everyday
speech
to
literature.