German Phrase
Ja, 'The Daily Grind' ist super.
Meaning
A short, enthusiastic agreement that the thing called “The Daily Grind” (a podcast, coffee shop, TV show, etc.) is excellent. The speaker uses the informal ‘Ja’ and the colloquial adjective ‘super’ to convey a friendly tone.
When to use
Use this sentence when a friend asks for your opinion about a specific product, media title, or place named ‘The Daily Grind’. It works best in casual conversation, social media comments, or informal reviews.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Ja,'The Daily Grind'istsuper.
Ja
An informal way to say 'yes' or to agree with a statement.
ist
Third‑person singular present of the verb *sein* (to be). It agrees with the singular subject, even if the subject is an English title.
super
A colloquial adjective meaning 'great', 'awesome' or 'fantastic'. Used predicatively after *sein*.
Quoting English titles
English titles are kept in single quotes and are not inflected; they are treated as proper nouns.
🗨In Conversation
Wie findest du 'The Daily Grind'?
What do you think of 'The Daily Grind'?
Ja, 'The Daily Grind' ist super.
Yes, 'The Daily Grind' is great.
✕Common Mistakes
Ja, 'The Daily Grind' sind super.
The verb must agree with the singular subject; ‘The Daily Grind’ is treated as a singular noun, so use *ist* not *sind*.
Ja, 'The Daily Grind' ist sehr super.
‘Super’ already means ‘very good’; adding *sehr* is redundant and sounds unnatural.
Ja, 'the daily grind' ist super.
When quoting a title, keep the original capitalization and punctuation.
↔Alternatives
Ja, das ist großartig.
Yes, that is wonderful.
Ja, das ist toll.
Yes, that is great.
Ja, ich finde es super.
Yes, I find it awesome.
Cultural Tip
‘Super’ is a very common, informal way to praise something in German, especially among younger speakers. It’s perfectly fine in spoken language and casual writing, but in formal contexts you might prefer ‘ausgezeichnet’ or ‘hervorragend’. When you quote an English title, keep the original spelling and punctuation; German grammar does not change the English words.

