Der Löwe in German — Meaning, Gender, Plural & Declension

A didactic visual for the German masculine noun "Der Löwe" (the lion) from howtostudygerman.com, featuring two male lions in the savanna with one yawning and the other resting in the grass.
"Löwe" is masculine in German — the correct article is der. The plural is die Löwen (add -n). In English, Löwe means "lion". The female lion is die Löwin.

Gender rule: Many large predator names are masculine in German — der Löwe, der Tiger, der Wolf. Important: Löwe follows the N-Deklination (weak declension), so it adds -n in all cases except the nominative singular. See all gender patterns in the Article Rules and a full overview at the German articles.

Der Löwe is A1–A2 vocabulary and one of the most well-known animal nouns in German. Like der Elefant, it follows the N-Deklination — a pattern where the noun changes its ending in almost every case. Getting this right is one of the key steps from A1 to A2. Below you'll find the full declension table, example sentences, a common mistake to avoid, and a short quiz.

Löwe — Declension Table

⚠ N-Deklination (Weak Declension): Löwe follows the N-Deklination — it adds -n in the accusative, dative, and genitive singular, and throughout the plural. Only the nominative singular has no ending: der Löwe. All other forms: den Löwen, dem Löwen, des Löwen. This is the same pattern as der Elefant — learn the full group at N-Deklination.
Case Singular Plural
Nominative der Löwe die Löwen
Genitive des Löwen der Löwen
Dative dem Löwen den Löwen
Accusative den Löwen die Löwen
Note: The plural is die Löwen — add -n to the singular form. In the dative plural, no extra -n is needed since the noun already ends in -n: den Löwen. For a full overview of how articles change across all cases, see the Articles Chart. For indefinite articles (ein/einen/einem...), see Indefinite Articles.

Example Sentences with Löwe

Der Löwe liegt ruhig im Schatten eines Baumes.
(The lion is lying calmly in the shade of a tree.)Nominative

Die Touristen fotografieren den Löwen von weitem.
(The tourists photograph the lion from a distance.)Accusative

Der Ranger gibt dem Löwen jeden Tag frisches Fleisch.
(The ranger gives the lion fresh meat every day.)Dative

Die Mähne des Löwen ist dunkel und sehr dicht.
(The lion's mane is dark and very thick.)Genitive

Die Löwen ruhen in der Mittagshitze zusammen.
(The lions rest together in the midday heat.)Nominative Plural

Der Forscher folgt den Löwen durch die Savanne.
(The researcher follows the lions through the savannah.)Dative Plural

Related Words & Compounds

Word family (Wortfamilie): die Löwin (lioness), löwenhaft (lion-like — adjective)

Common compounds (Komposita): das Löwenjunge (lion cub), die Löwenmähne (lion's mane), das Löwenmaul (snapdragon / lion's mouth), der Löwenanteil (lion's share — idiom), der Löwenzahn (dandelion — literally "lion's tooth"), das Löwenrudel (pride of lions)

Common Mistake with Löwe

❌ Common mistake: Die Mähne des Löwens ist beeindruckend.

✅ Correct: Die Mähne des Löwen ist beeindruckend.

💡 Why: Because Löwe follows the N-Deklination, the genitive is des Löwen — not des Löwens. The ending -ns does not exist in the N-Deklination. It only appears in a small group of mixed nouns like der Name → des Namens. For all other N-Deklination nouns — including Löwe and Elefant — the genitive ending is simply -n or -en.

Quick Quiz: Test Your Knowledge

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

1. Das Kind sieht ___ Löw___ zum ersten Mal im Zoo.

  • A) der Löwe
  • B) den Löwen
  • C) den Löwe
Check Answer
Correct Answer: B) den Löwen
"Sehen" (to see) takes the accusative. Masculine accusative = den. Because Löwe follows the N-Deklination, the noun adds -n: den Löwen. Option C) is wrong — it uses the accusative article but forgets to add the -n ending to the noun.

2. Das Futter gehört ___ Löw___ .

  • A) dem Löwe
  • B) dem Löwen
  • C) den Löwen
Check Answer
Correct Answer: B) dem Löwen
"Gegenüber" (opposite / across from) always takes the dative. Masculine dative = dem. With N-Deklination, the noun adds -n: dem Löwen. Option A) has the right article but misses the obligatory -n ending — a very typical mistake with N-Deklination nouns.

3. Das ist ein sehr mächtig___ Löwe.

  • A) -e
  • B) -en
  • C) -er
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) -er
After an indefinite article in the nominative with a masculine noun, the adjective ending is -er: ein mächtiger Löwe. Because ein doesn't carry a gender signal, the adjective must show it with -er. Compare: feminine eine starke Katze (-e), neuter ein starkes Pferd (-es).

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Löwe masculine, feminine, or neuter in German?

Löwe is masculine — the correct article is der. It follows the N-Deklination, which means the noun adds -n in all cases except the nominative singular. If you specifically mean a female lion, use die Löwin. See all gender patterns in the Article Rules.

What is the plural of Löwe?

The plural is die Löwen — add -n to the singular. This follows directly from the N-Deklination pattern. In the dative plural, no extra -n is needed since the noun already ends in -n: den Löwen.

What is the genitive of Löwe — des Löwen or des Löwens?

The correct genitive is des Löwen — not des Löwens. Because Löwe follows the N-Deklination, it adds only -n in the genitive, just like in all other non-nominative forms. The ending -ns belongs to a small group of mixed nouns like der Name → des Namens, but not to Löwe.

What is the difference between Löwe and Löwin?

Der Löwe refers to a lion in general or specifically a male lion, while die Löwin is the female lion (lioness). The suffix -in is the standard way to form the feminine of many masculine animal nouns in German — the same pattern appears in der Hund → die Hündin and der Elefant → die Elefantin. Note that Löwin is a regular feminine noun and does not follow the N-Deklination.

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