German Phrase
Bring die aktuellen Testergebnisse mit.
Meaning
This sentence is a direct request meaning ‘Bring the current test results with you.’ It tells the listener to take the most recent test results to a meeting, presentation, or discussion.
When to use
Use this phrase in professional, academic, or technical settings when you need a colleague or student to bring the latest test data to a meeting, lab session, or review. It works well in both formal and informal contexts, though adding ‘bitte’ softens the tone.
✦Grammar Breakdown
BringdieaktuellenTestergebnissemit
Imperative of bringen
Use the singular informal imperative 'Bring' (from 'du' form) without the subject pronoun.
Accusative plural article
The definite article for plural nouns in the accusative case is 'die'.
Adjective weak declension
After a definite article, adjectives take the weak ending '-en' in the plural accusative.
Separable verb particle
In the imperative, the separable prefix 'mit' is placed at the end of the clause.
🗨In Conversation
Bring die aktuellen Testergebnisse mit.
Bring the current test results with you.
Klar, ich habe sie schon ausgedruckt.
Sure, I’ve already printed them out.
✕Common Mistakes
Bringen die aktuellen Testergebnisse mit.
The infinitive ‘bringen’ cannot be used for a direct command; use the imperative ‘Bring’.
Bring der aktuellen Testergebnisse mit.
The article must be accusative plural ‘die’, not dative ‘der’.
Bring die aktueller Testergebnisse mit.
After a definite article, the adjective needs the weak ending ‘-en’.
↔Alternatives
Bitte bring die neuesten Testergebnisse mit.
Please bring the newest test results with you.
Könntest du die aktuellen Testergebnisse mitbringen?
Could you bring the current test results?
Vergiss nicht, die aktuellen Testergebnisse mitzubringen.
Don’t forget to bring the current test results.
Cultural Tip
German imperatives can sound blunt, especially in a workplace. Adding ‘bitte’ or phrasing the request as a question (‘Könntest du…’) makes it more polite. Also, be aware that ‘Testergebnisse’ can refer to any kind of test – medical, academic, or technical – so context matters.

