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

Close-up of a person flexing their bicep muscle in a gym, illustrating the German masculine noun "der Muskel".
"Muskel" is masculine in German — the correct article is der. The plural is die Muskeln. In English, Muskel means "muscle".

Gender rule: der Muskel is masculine. It is a loanword from Latin musculus, and its gender must simply be learned — there is no reliable ending-based rule for body part nouns in German. The safest approach is always to learn every noun with its article from the start. See all gender patterns in the Article Rules and a full overview at the german articles.

Der Muskel is an A1–A2 vocabulary word that comes up constantly in sport, fitness, and medical contexts. Its plural adds -n: die Muskeln — a common pattern for masculine nouns ending in -el. Because der Muskel is a loanword, English speakers sometimes mistakenly apply an -s plural — making the plural one of the key things to learn here. Understanding how cases work with masculine nouns like der Muskel is an important step at A1–A2 level. For more body part nouns, also see der Arm and der Knochen.

Muskel — Declension Table

Case Singular Plural
Nominative der Muskel die Muskeln
Genitive des Muskels der Muskeln
Dative dem Muskel den Muskeln
Accusative den Muskel die Muskeln
Note: The plural die Muskeln adds -n — this is the standard plural for masculine nouns ending in -el. In the dative plural, no extra -n is added because the plural already ends in -n: den Muskeln. The genitive singular adds -s: des Muskels. 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 Muskel

Sein Muskel zuckt unwillkürlich nach dem intensiven Training.
(His muscle twitches involuntarily after the intense training session.)Nominative

Sie massiert den Muskel vorsichtig, bis die Spannung nachlässt.
(She massages the muscle carefully until the tension eases.)Accusative

Er fühlt einen stechenden Schmerz im Muskel nach dem Sprint.
(He feels a sharp pain in the muscle after the sprint.)Dative

Die Dehnung des Muskels vor dem Sport kann Verletzungen vorbeugen.
(Stretching the muscle before sport can help prevent injuries.)Genitive

Nach dem langen Training zittern ihre Muskeln vor Erschöpfung.
(After the long training session, her muscles tremble with exhaustion.)Nominative Plural

Regelmäßiges Dehnen tut den Muskeln nach intensiver Belastung sehr gut.
(Regular stretching is very good for the muscles after intense exertion.)Dative Plural

Related Words & Compounds

Word family (Wortfamilie):

  • muskulös — muscular (adjective, from the same Latin root musculus)

Common compounds (Komposita):

  • der Muskelkater — delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS)
  • der Muskelkrampf — muscle cramp
  • der Muskelaufbau — muscle building
  • die Muskelgruppe — muscle group

Common Mistake with Muskel

❌ Common mistake: Seine Muskels sind sehr stark.

✅ Correct: Seine Muskeln sind sehr stark.

💡 Why: The plural of der Muskel is die Muskeln — not Muskels. Although der Muskel is a loanword from Latin, it has fully adopted a standard German plural pattern: masculine nouns ending in -el typically add -n in the plural. The -s plural does not apply here.

Quick Quiz: Test Your Knowledge

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

1. Er spürt einen Schmerz in ___ Muskel nach dem Training.

  • A) den
  • B) des
  • C) dem
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) dem
Im is a contraction of in dem — the preposition in here indicates a fixed location (where does he feel the pain?), which requires the dative case. For masculine nouns, the dative article is dem: im Muskel. Option A) den is accusative. Option B) des is genitive.

2. Die Dehnung ___ Muskels vor dem Sport beugt Verletzungen vor.

  • A) dem
  • B) der
  • C) des
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) des
"Die Dehnung ___ Muskels" — whose stretching? The muscle's. This is a possession relationship expressed with the genitive case. For masculine nouns, the genitive article is des and the noun adds -s: des Muskels. Option A) dem is dative. Option B) der is the genitive article for feminine nouns.

3. Ein verletzt___ Muskel braucht Ruhe und Kühlung.

  • 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 verletzter Muskel. Because ein does not carry a visible masculine signal in the nominative (it looks the same as neuter ein), the adjective must carry the gender signal — this is the strong ending -er. Option A) -e is used after a definite article in the nominative. Option B) -en is the weak ending used in most other case-gender combinations.

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More Body Part Nouns

For the full list with articles and plurals, see the Body Parts Vocabulary page. You can also browse more topic-based word lists in the German Vocabulary Overview and test yourself with the Vocabulary Quizzes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Muskel masculine, feminine, or neuter in German?

Muskel is masculine — the correct article is der. It is a loanword from Latin musculus, and its gender must simply be learned. The best habit is always to learn every noun with its article from the start. For a full overview of gender patterns, see the Article Rules.

What is the plural of Muskel in German?

The plural is die Muskeln — add -n. Do not use Muskels — the -s plural is rare in German and does not apply here. In the dative plural, no extra -n is added because the plural already ends in -n: den Muskeln.

What is der Muskelkater in German?

Der Muskelkater is the German word for delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) — the aching sensation in muscles that typically appears one to two days after intense exercise. The word is a compound of Muskel (muscle) and Kater (tomcat — also used colloquially for a hangover). In everyday German, Muskelkater haben (to have muscle soreness) is a very common phrase.

What is the genitive of der Muskel?

The genitive singular is des Muskels — add -s. This is the standard pattern for masculine nouns ending in -el. The genitive plural is der Muskeln. See the Cases Overview for more detail.

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