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German Phrase

Dein Techniker schickt dir den Link.

/daɪn ˈtɛç.ni.kɐ ˈʃɪçt diːɐ̯ deːn lɪŋk/
Meaning"Your technician sends you the link."
💡

Meaning

Your technician sends you the link. The sentence is used to inform someone that a technical support person will provide a URL or download link.

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When to use

Use this phrase in IT support or customer‑service conversations when you want to tell a client or colleague that the technician will forward a link (e.g., to a driver, manual, or remote‑access session).

Grammar Breakdown

DeinTechnikerschicktdirdenLink

1

Possessive Determiner

"Dein" is the masculine nominative form of the possessive determiner meaning 'your'.

2

Noun Gender & Case

"Techniker" is a masculine noun in the nominative case, acting as the subject.

3

Verb Conjugation

"schickt" is the 3rd‑person singular present tense of "schicken" (to send).

4

Dative Pronoun

"dir" is the dative form of the informal "du", used for the indirect object (to you).

5

Accusative Object

"den Link" is the masculine accusative object; the article changes from "der" (nom.) to "den" (acc.).

🗨In Conversation

A

Kannst du mir den Link zum Treiber schicken?

Can you send me the link to the driver?

Dein Techniker schickt dir den Link.

Your technician will send you the link.

B

Common Mistakes

  • Dein Techniker schickt du den Link.

    The indirect object requires the dative pronoun "dir", not the nominative "du".

  • Dein Techniker schickt dir der Link.

    The masculine accusative article is "den", not the nominative "der".

  • Dein Techniker schickst dir den Link.

    Subject is third‑person singular, so the verb must be "schickt", not second‑person "schickst".

Alternatives

  • Dein Techniker wird dir den Link schicken.

    Your technician will send you the link.

  • Der Techniker schickt dir den Link.

    The technician sends you the link.

  • Du bekommst den Link von deinem Techniker.

    You will receive the link from your technician.

de

Cultural Tip

In German business communication the formal "Sie" is usually preferred; the use of "dir" signals an informal relationship (colleague, friend, or a relaxed support chat). "Link" is an English loanword that is fully accepted in German tech jargon, but in very formal writing you might hear "Verknüpfung" or "Verweis".