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

Panoramic view of the Munich cityscape and rooftops at sunset, serving as the hero image for the grammar guide on the German noun 'der Kollege'.
"Kollege" is masculine in German — the correct article is der. The plural is die Kollegen. In English, Kollege means "colleague" (male). The female form is die Kollegin (plural: die Kolleginnen).

Gender rule: Male persons and male professions are always masculine in German. But careful: "Kollege" follows the N-Deklination, meaning it adds -n in every case except the nominative singular. See all gender patterns in the German Article Rules.
"Der Kollege" is an essential word for anyone working or studying in a German-speaking country. It's commonly used in everyday business and work vocabulary and typically learned at A2–B1 level. Like der Junge, it follows the N-Deklination — one of the trickiest declension patterns in German. Below you'll find the full declension, example sentences, and a quiz.

Kollege — Declension Table

Case Singular Plural
Nominative der Kollege die Kollegen
Genitive des Kollegen der Kollegen
Dative dem Kollegen den Kollegen
Accusative den Kollegen die Kollegen
⚠ N-Deklination: "Kollege" is a weak noun (N-Deklination). In every case except the nominative singular, the noun adds -n: den Kollegen, dem Kollegen, des Kollegen. This is a common pattern for masculine nouns ending in -e that refer to people: der Junge, der Kunde, der Neffe, der Experte.
Note: The plural is die Kollegen — identical to the accusative, dative, and genitive singular. Context and the article make the difference clear. 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 Kollege

Der Kollege ist heute krank.
(The colleague is sick today.)Nominative

Ich habe den Kollegen gestern im Büro getroffen.
(I met the colleague in the office yesterday.)Accusative

Kannst du dem Kollegen die E-Mail weiterleiten?
(Can you forward the email to the colleague?)Dative

Das ist der Schreibtisch des Kollegen.
(That is the colleague's desk.)Genitive

Die Kollegen gehen zusammen Mittag essen.
(The colleagues are going to lunch together.)Nominative Plural

Er hat den Kollegen zum Geburtstag gratuliert.
(He congratulated the colleagues on their birthday.)Dative Plural

Related Words & Compounds

Word family (Wortfamilie): die Kollegin (female colleague), kollegial (collegial — adjective), die Kollegialität (collegiality), das Kollegium (faculty/staff — collective noun)

Common compounds (Komposita): der Arbeitskollege (work colleague), der Studienkollege (fellow student), der Mannschaftskollege (teammate), die Kollegenschaft (the colleagues — collective)

Common Mistake with Kollege

❌ Common mistake: Ich frage den Kollege.

✅ Correct: Ich frage den Kollegen.

💡 Why: "Kollege" follows the N-Deklination. In the accusative, dative, and genitive, the noun must add -n: den Kollegen, dem Kollegen, des Kollegen. Dropping the -n is one of the most frequent mistakes, even among advanced learners.

Quick Quiz: Test Your Knowledge

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

1. ___ Kollege arbeitet in der IT-Abteilung.

  • A) Die
  • B) Das
  • C) Der
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) Der
"Der Kollege" — Male persons are always masculine. In the nominative, the article is der and the noun keeps its base form: der Kollege.

2. Ich habe ___ Kollege___ um Hilfe gebeten.

  • A) den Kollege
  • B) dem Kollegen
  • C) den Kollegen
Check Answer
Correct Answer: C) den Kollegen
"Bitten" takes an accusative object (whom?). Masculine accusative = den, and because "Kollege" follows the N-Deklination, the noun adds -n: den Kollegen.

3. Der neu___ Kollege fängt am Montag an.

  • A) -e
  • B) -er
  • C) -en
Check Answer
Correct Answer: A) -e
After a definite article in the nominative, the adjective ending is -e for all genders: der neue Kollege, die neue Kollegin, das neue Büro.

Want to practice more nouns like this? The Article Trainer has 600+ nouns — including work vocabulary and all common N-Deklination words.

More Work & People Nouns

  • der Chef — the boss
  • der Kunde — the customer
  • der Mitarbeiter — the employee
  • die Chefin — the boss (female)
  • der Praktikant — the intern
  • das Büro — the office
  • die Firma — the company
  • der Beruf — the profession

For more work-related vocabulary, explore the Business German vocabulary list or browse the full vocabulary overview.

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

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

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Kollege masculine, feminine, or neuter in German?

Kollege is masculine — the correct article is der. It refers specifically to a male colleague. The female form is die Kollegin (plural: die Kolleginnen). In modern German, you'll often see the inclusive form "Kolleg*innen" or "Kolleg:innen" in written communication.

What is the plural of Kollege?

The plural is die Kollegen. Note that this form looks identical to the accusative, dative, and genitive singular — only the article tells you whether it's singular or plural. Context usually makes it clear.

Why does Kollege change to Kollegen in the accusative?

Because "Kollege" follows the N-Deklination (weak declension). Masculine nouns ending in -e that refer to people almost always follow this pattern — they add -n in every case except the nominative. Other examples: der Junge (boy), der Kunde (customer), der Neffe (nephew), der Experte (expert).

What is the difference between Kollege and Mitarbeiter?

Der Kollege means "colleague" — someone you work with at the same level or in the same team. Der Mitarbeiter means "employee" or "staff member" — it emphasizes the employment relationship rather than the peer relationship. Your Mitarbeiter might not be your Kollege if they work in a completely different department.

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