When learning German, it’s tempting to grab the word Person and think you’re done — after all, die Person exists in both languages. But for real conversations, the most common and emotionally rich word for person in German is something else: der Mensch.

It’s masculine, and the plural is die Menschen. If you need a hand with article patterns like der, my gender video lesson will make things a lot easier.

Mensch is one of the 1000 most frequently used nouns in German and shows up everywhere — in praise, complaints, philosophy, or just casual greetings.

Examples in all four cases:

Nominative:
Der Mensch ist neugierig.
The person is curious.

Accusative:
Ich sehe einen Menschen im Garten.
I see a person in the garden.

Dative:
Hilf dem Menschen, bitte!
Help the person, please!

Genitive:
Die Rechte des Menschen sind wichtig.
The rights of the person are important.

Where you’ll hear Mensch:

  • ein guter Mensch – a good person

  • ein schlechter Mensch – a bad person

  • Menschenrechte – human rights

  • Menschlichkeit – humanity

  • Wie kann ein Mensch so etwas tun? – How can a person do such a thing?

There’s also the famous interjection:

  • Mensch! – like “Man!” or “Jeez!” (expressing surprise, frustration, or affection)

Common verbs: sein (to be), kennen (know), helfen (help), verstehen (understand), retten (rescue)
Adjectives: gut, böse, einsam, freundlich, fremd, jung, alt

While Person is the legal/neutral word (e.g., in contracts), Mensch adds warmth, opinion, and emotion — and is often used when talking about what makes someone human.

Beginner dialogue using Mensch:

A: Wer ist das?
B: Keine Ahnung. Aber er wirkt wie ein netter Mensch.
A: Who’s that?
B: No idea. But he seems like a nice person.

Now it’s your turn. Think of your answer and say it aloud using Mensch.

“Was macht einen Menschen wirklich freundlich?”
What makes a person truly friendly?

Try to say it aloud — it’s how you move from passive to active vocabulary.

Duden entry for “Mensch”

German Word of the Day
Now you know how to say person in German — and how der Mensch adds depth, feeling, and nuance to what might seem like a basic word.

Download the free illustrated PDF of the 1000 most frequently used nouns in German and keep expanding your German vocabulary with everyday essentials.

Ready for more German Words of the Day?
Check out Messer — a sharp little noun with everyday impact.
Or revisit Milch — and practice real-life German in your kitchen or café.

About the Author Stephan

Stephan has been a professional language teacher since the early 2000s. He's been calling Berlin his home since 2006, when he started managing (and founding his own) language schools in addition to teaching German and English. He's the owner of Deutschable and loves writing about language, history, and game changers.

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