German Phrase
Dein Techniker schickt dir den 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.
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
Possessive Determiner
"Dein" is the masculine nominative form of the possessive determiner meaning 'your'.
Noun Gender & Case
"Techniker" is a masculine noun in the nominative case, acting as the subject.
Verb Conjugation
"schickt" is the 3rd‑person singular present tense of "schicken" (to send).
Dative Pronoun
"dir" is the dative form of the informal "du", used for the indirect object (to you).
Accusative Object
"den Link" is the masculine accusative object; the article changes from "der" (nom.) to "den" (acc.).
🗨In Conversation
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.
✕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.
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".

