Before You Go — Grab Your Free PDF

100 essential German nouns with articles, plural forms & example sentences.

100% FREE
  • 100 most important German nouns
  • Correct article (der/die/das) for every noun
  • Plural forms & example sentences
  • Instant PDF download

Join 4,000+ German learners · Unsubscribe anytime

📥 Free PDF: 100 German Nouns with Articles — get it now 📥 Free: 100 German Nouns PDF Download Free →

Die Milch in German – Meaning, Gender, Plural & Declension

A simple glass jar filled with fresh white liquid sits on a rustic wooden table against a dark background, highlighting die Milch (the milk), which serves as a nutrient-rich beverage and a fundamental ingredient for many daily recipes.
Milch is feminine in German — the correct article is die. In English, Milch translates to milk.

Gender rule: There is no strict ending-based rule for this original Germanic root word — the article must be memorized. See all gender patterns in the Article Rules and a full overview at the German Articles.
Die Milch is a vital word within the German food and drinks vocabulary. It is a fundamental A1-level noun used daily when talking about breakfast, coffee, or groceries. Below you'll find the full declension, example sentences, and a quiz.

Milch — Declension Table

Case Singular Plural
Nominative die Milch die Milche / Milchen
Genitive der Milch der Milche / Milchen
Dative der Milch den Milchen
Accusative die Milch die Milche / Milchen
Note: In German, Milch is primarily an uncountable noun. However, technically there are two plural forms: die Milche and die Milchen. These plurals are only used in highly specialized or technical contexts (like agriculture or the dairy industry) to distinguish between different types of milk. In everyday language, they are never used. For a full overview of how German articles change across cases, see the Articles Chart.

Example Sentences with Milch

Die frische Milch steht im Kühlschrank.
(The fresh milk is in the fridge.)Nominative

Sie trinkt die Milch am liebsten kalt.
(She prefers to drink the milk cold.)Accusative

Der Kaffee schmeckt mit der Milch viel milder.
(The coffee tastes much milder with the milk.)Dative

Der Fettgehalt der Milch ist auf der Verpackung angegeben.
(The fat content of the milk is indicated on the packaging.)Genitive

Das Labor testet verschiedene Milche auf ihre Qualität.
(The lab tests different milks for their quality.)Accusative Plural (Technical Context)

Related Words & Compounds

Word family (Wortfamilie): milchig (milky / cloudy — adjective)

Common compounds (Komposita): das Milchglas (milk glass), die Kuhmilch (cow's milk), die Hafermilch (oat milk), der Milchreis (rice pudding), der Milchshake (milkshake)

Common Mistake with Milch

❌ Common mistake: Das Milch ist im Kühlschrank.

✅ Correct: Die Milch ist im Kühlschrank.

💡 Why: Many beginners guess that Milch is neuter (das) because it is an inanimate liquid or perhaps by making a false connection to English. However, in German, die Milch is strictly feminine. There is no specific ending rule here, so you must memorize its article.

Quick Quiz: Test Your Knowledge

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

1. Der Preis ___ ist in den letzten Monaten stark gestiegen.

  • A) das Milch
  • B) der Milch
  • C) dem Milch
Check Answer
Correct Answer: B) der Milch
"Der Preis der Milch" — the genitive case shows possession or attribution (the price of what?). Feminine genitive = der: der Milch.

2. Jeden Morgen kauft er ___ im Supermarkt.

  • A) der Milch
  • B) dem Milch
  • C) die Milch
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) die Milch
"Kaufen" takes a direct object in the accusative case. Feminine accusative = die: die Milch.

3. Sie rührt den Kakao in der warm___ Milch um.

  • A) -e
  • B) -er
  • C) -en
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) -en
After the definite article der in the dative feminine (in der...), the adjective ending is -en: in der warmen Milch.

More Food Nouns & Vocabulary

For more themed vocabulary lists, explore the Vocabulary overview list, practice with the food and drinks vocabulary, or browse the full grammar overview to master your German cases and vocabulary.

Is it der, die, or das? Practice makes perfect.

The Article Trainer gives you 600+ nouns to drill — including everyday vocabulary. Pick the article, get instant feedback, and stop guessing.

Practice German Articles →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Milch masculine, feminine, or neuter in German?

Milch is feminine — the correct article is die. There is no simple ending-based rule to predict this, so it must be memorized. Its compound nouns take on the gender of the final word, but if Milch is the final word, the compound will also be feminine (e.g., die Kuhmilch, die Hafermilch).

What is the plural of Milch in German?

In everyday language, Milch is an uncountable noun and is only used in the singular. However, in technical or agricultural contexts, the plurals die Milche or die Milchen exist to describe different varieties or types of milk.

How do you say milkshake in German?

The German word for milkshake is der Milchshake. This is a common compound word combining the German "Milch" with the English loanword "Shake". Because "der Shake" is masculine, the entire compound noun becomes masculine.

Picture of Niko

Niko

Nikolai Beiers (Niko) is a native German teacher with 8 years of professional experience and the founder of HowToStudyGerman.com. He has published 69 grammar articles, 57 vocabulary guides, created 90 interactive quizzes, and written 26 short stories for learners from A1 to C1. He is also the creator of the Article Trainer and the Adjective Endings eBook. His work focuses on making German grammar and vocabulary easy to understand and practice through clear explanations and engaging learning materials.

Stop Guessing "Der, Die, Das"

Master German articles AND adjective endings — in one bundle.

  • Article Trainer — Learn the patterns via 600+ nouns
  • Adjective Endings eBook — all charts, rules & 50+ exercises
  • Lifetime access, no subscription
$54.90 $42 SAVE $12.90
Get the Complete Bundle — $42

One-time payment · Lifetime access · 14-day money-back guarantee

🎓 Bundle Deal: Article Trainer + Adjective eBook — $42 (save $12.90) 🎓 Bundle: $42 — save $12.90 Get it →