>>1343132I'll try to help you out.
Note: I learned German from my native tongue, Dutch. I can and probably will use a few terms in English wrong (like saying 'adjectives' instead of 'adverbs').
Basics of German:
EVERY NOUN STARTS WITH A CAPITAL LETTER. Not doing so is a grammatical mistake.
German has a different 'subjects row' when compare to English.
English German
I Ich
You Du
He/She/It Er/Sie/Es
They sie / Sie (note: 'sie' with a capital letter is a formal way of addressing others, often used for strangers or your superiors)
We Wir
We Ihr (i dont actually know the difference between these two 'we's')
Note: in German, a 'ch' isnt pronounced as a K, it is a sound i dont see back in English. I know a video my teacher used to show me, but thats in Dutch. Link anyway because you never know:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAWNJxFKvjEEnglish video: (although her soft ch doesnt hit the spot)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rnPFloFiX0There are also a total of four 'cases'. Google Translate told me the name is case, so it might be wrong. Anyway, these cases affect sentences. More specifically the subject and the direct object. You can learn what case a sentence is in by signal words.
You can learn what to do with verbs and go into more detail about other basics if you buy some German textbooks.