German Phrase
Ja, ich genieße gerade die Neuheiten.
Meaning
The speaker is confirming something and saying that they are currently enjoying the new things that have just become available – be it new products, features, or any recent additions. The word gerade stresses that the enjoyment is happening at this very moment.
When to use
Use this sentence when someone asks if you have tried or are using a recent update, a fresh collection, or any newly released items. It works well in casual conversation, in a shop, or when discussing software updates.
✦Grammar Breakdown
JaichgenießegeradedieNeuheiten
Ja (affirmation)
Used to confirm or agree with a statement, similar to 'yes' in English.
ich (personal pronoun)
First‑person singular pronoun; always lowercase in German.
genießen (verb)
A regular verb meaning 'to enjoy'. In the present tense, the ich‑form ends in -e: ich genieße.
gerade (adverb)
Means 'right now' or 'just', placed before the verb or after it for emphasis.
die Neuheiten (noun phrase)
Neuheiten is a plural noun meaning 'new items/novelties'. It takes the definite article die in the nominative plural.
🗨In Conversation
Hast du das neue Update schon ausprobiert?
Have you already tried the new update?
Ja, ich genieße gerade die Neuheiten.
Yes, I’m currently enjoying the new features.
✕Common Mistakes
Ja, ich genieß gerade die Neuheiten.
Do not drop the ending –e; the correct present‑tense form for ich is genieße.
Ja, ich genieße gerade die Neuheit.
Neuheiten is plural; using the singular article ‘die Neuheit’ changes the meaning.
Ja, ich genieße die Neuheiten gerade.
Placing gerade after the noun (die Neuheiten gerade) sounds unnatural; it should modify the verb.
↔Alternatives
Ja, ich freue mich gerade über die Neuheiten.
Yes, I’m excited about the new items right now.
Ja, ich probiere gerade die neuen Features aus.
Yes, I’m trying out the new features right now.
Ja, die Neuheiten gefallen mir gerade sehr.
Yes, I really like the new items at the moment.
Cultural Tip
In German, the verb genießen often collocates with concrete experiences (food, music, scenery) but it is also perfectly natural to use it for abstract or digital novelties. Placing gerade before the verb (genieße gerade) is the most common word order, but you can also say gerade genieße ich… for extra emphasis. Remember that Neuheiten is always plural; the singular would be die Neuheit.

