Der Bruder in German — Gender, Plural, Declension & Quiz

Silhouette of the Oberbaumbrücke bridge and the Berlin TV tower over the river Spree at sunset, serving as the hero image for the grammar guide on the German noun 'der Bruder'.
"Bruder" is masculine in German — the correct article is der. The plural is die Brüder (with Umlaut). In English, Bruder means "brother".

Gender rule: Male persons are generally masculine in German. However, diminutive suffixes like -chen and -lein override this — which is why it's das Männchen (little man), not der Männchen. The plural adds an Umlaut (u → ü) but no extra ending: Bruder → Brüder. This is the same Umlaut-only pattern as der Vater → die Väter. See all patterns in the German Article Rules.
"Der Bruder" is core family vocabulary at A1 level — one of the first words you'll learn when talking about siblings. The gender is straightforward (male person = masculine), and the declension follows a standard pattern. The only tricky part is the Umlaut in the plural: Brüder, not "Bruders." Below you'll find the full declension, example sentences, and a quiz.

Bruder — Declension Table

Case Singular Plural
Nominative der Bruder die Brüder
Genitive des Bruders der Brüder
Dative dem Bruder den Brüdern
Accusative den Bruder die Brüder
Note: In the genitive singular, "Bruder" adds -s: des Bruders. The plural is die Brüder — only the Umlaut changes (u → ü), no extra ending is added. In the dative plural, an -n is required: den Brüdern. This is the same pattern as der Vater → die Väter and die Mutter → die Mütter. For a full overview of how articles change across cases, see the Articles Chart. For indefinite articles (ein/eine/einem...), see Indefinite Articles.

Example Sentences with Bruder

Der Bruder wohnt in München.
(The brother lives in Munich.)Nominative

Ich besuche den Bruder am Sonntag.
(I'm visiting the brother on Sunday.)Accusative

Sie schenkt dem Bruder eine Uhr zum Geburtstag.
(She gives the brother a watch for his birthday.)Dative

Das Fahrrad des Bruders steht vor der Tür.
(The brother's bicycle is in front of the door.)Genitive

Die Brüder sehen sich nur selten.
(The brothers rarely see each other.)Nominative Plural

Die Eltern haben den Brüdern das gleiche Geschenk gekauft.
(The parents bought the brothers the same gift.)Dative Plural

Related Words & Compounds

Word family (Wortfamilie): die Schwester (sister), die Geschwister (siblings — plural only), brüderlich (brotherly — adjective), die Brüderlichkeit (brotherhood/fraternity), verbrüdern (to fraternize — verb)

Common compounds (Komposita): der Halbbruder (half-brother), der Stiefbruder (stepbrother), der Zwillingsbruder (twin brother), der Schwagerbruder (brother-in-law — informal, standard: der Schwager)

Common Mistake with Bruder

❌ Common mistake: Ich habe zwei Bruders.

✅ Correct: Ich habe zwei Brüder.

💡 Why: The plural of "Bruder" is die Brüder — with an Umlaut (u → ü), not with an -s ending. Adding -s is an English habit that doesn't work here. The same Umlaut-only pattern applies to der Vater → die Väter and die Mutter → die Mütter.

Quick Quiz: Test Your Knowledge

Can you get all three right? Apply what you've learned above.

1. ___ Bruder ist Ingenieur.

  • A) Die
  • B) Das
  • C) Der
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) Der
"Der Bruder" — Male persons are generally masculine in German. In the nominative, the article is der.

2. Die Schwester hilft ___ Bruder bei den Hausaufgaben.

  • A) den Bruder
  • B) dem Bruder
  • C) der Bruder
Check Answer
Correct Answer: B) dem Bruder
"Helfen" always requires a dative object (whom do you help?). Masculine dative = dem: dem Bruder.

3. Er hat einen älter___ Bruder.

  • A) -e
  • B) -er
  • C) -en
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) -en
After an indefinite article in the accusative masculine, the adjective ending is -en: einen älteren Bruder. This is because masculine accusative is the one case where indefinite articles change (ein → einen), and the adjective always takes -en.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Bruder masculine, feminine, or neuter in German?

Bruder is masculine — the correct article is der. Male family members are generally masculine in German: der Bruder, der Vater, der Sohn, der Onkel. Be aware that diminutive suffixes like -chen and -lein override this and make the noun neuter (das Brüderchen). See all gender rules in the Article Rules.

What is the plural of Bruder?

The plural is die Brüder — the vowel changes from u to ü (Umlaut), but no ending is added. This is the same Umlaut-only pattern as der Vater → die Väter, die Mutter → die Mütter, and die Tochter → die Töchter.

How do you say siblings in German?

"Siblings" is die Geschwister — a plural-only noun (there is no singular form). It covers brothers and sisters together. For example: "Ich habe drei Geschwister" (I have three siblings). If you want to specify, use der Bruder (brother) and die Schwester (sister) individually.

How do you say brother-in-law in German?

"Brother-in-law" is der Schwager (plural: die Schwäger — with Umlaut). Unlike "Schwiegertochter" or "Schwiegersohn," it doesn't use the Schwieger- prefix. The female equivalent is die Schwägerin (sister-in-law).

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