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German Phrase

Bring die aktuellen Testergebnisse mit.

/bʁɪŋ diː ˈaktʊ̯eːlən ˈtɛstɐˌʔɛʁɡəbnɪsə ˈmɪt/
Meaning"Bring the current test results with you."
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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.

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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

1

Imperative of bringen

Use the singular informal imperative 'Bring' (from 'du' form) without the subject pronoun.

2

Accusative plural article

The definite article for plural nouns in the accusative case is 'die'.

3

Adjective weak declension

After a definite article, adjectives take the weak ending '-en' in the plural accusative.

4

Separable verb particle

In the imperative, the separable prefix 'mit' is placed at the end of the clause.

🗨In Conversation

A

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.

B

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.

de

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.