Home

nahmt

Nahmt is a conjugated form of the German verb nehmen, meaning to take. It is the second-person plural simple past (Präteritum) form, used with the pronoun ihr to mean "you took." For example: Ihr nahmt den Bus, statt zu gehen.

Historically, nehmen is a strong verb with distinct past tense forms: ich nahm, du nahmst, er nahm,

Usage and register-wise, nahmt appears most often in written narrative or formal narration. In everyday speech,

In summary, nahmt is the plural past tense form of nehmen for the subject ihr, with typical

wir
nahmen,
ihr
nahmt,
sie
nahmen.
Nahmt
survives
in
Modern
German
as
the
standard
Präteritum
ending
for
the
plural
subject.
The
form
derives
from
earlier
stages
of
the
language,
including
Old
High
German
nemen,
and
reflects
the
common
German
pattern
of
vowel
alternation
in
past
tense
forms.
speakers
frequently
prefer
the
Perfekt
construction
to
express
past
actions:
ihr
habt
genommen.
While
nahmt
is
perfectly
correct,
the
Präteritum
form
is
less
common
in
casual
conversation
and
more
typical
of
literature,
news
reporting,
or
historical
texts.
usage
in
formal
or
literary
contexts,
and
it
forms
part
of
a
broader
set
of
traditional
German
past-tense
patterns
that
contrast
with
the
more
common
spoken
Perfekt.