German Language Asked by Mrt on January 15, 2021
When I was studying German, I saw the following sentence:
Sie hat braune Haare.
The word "Haar" has neutral article and it is the object of the sentence. According to "German adjective ending reference tables" I checked out, it should have taken "es" not "e" because there are not any articles in the sentence and the object is in accusative form. However, it did not. Could someone explain why?
P.S: My German is very limited. Could you please explain it in English as much as possible.
You could say either
Sie hat braune Haare.
or
Sie hat braunes Haar.
In the former, "Haare" is plural (which seems fitting, given that she has about 100000 single hairs on her head), whereas in the latter, "Haar" is singular and refers to the collective of hair(s) as a whole (similar to "Fell" (fur)) and uncountable.
Note that with some other adjectives, only the second form is commonly used, e.g.,
Sie hat volles Haar.
Correct answer by Hagen von Eitzen on January 15, 2021
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