At CEFR level A1, learning to form compound question words with wo(r) + Präposition allows you to ask about things and ideas linked to fixed-preposition verbs, an essential skill for natural German conversation.
In German, many verbs and adjectives are permanently tied to a specific preposition — for example, warten auf (to wait for), sprechen über (to talk about), or denken an (to think about). When you want to ask a question about the thing or concept linked to that preposition, German fuses the question base wo and the preposition into a single compound word.
These compound question words are called Pronominaladverbien. They replace both the preposition and the object in one go, making your question short and precise. You will encounter them constantly in everyday German.
The most important question to ask yourself is: am I asking about a thing or idea, or about a person? The two cases require completely different structures.
Use wo(r) + Präposition when the answer refers to a thing, an idea, or a concept — anything that is not a person.
Er freut sich auf das Wochenende.
Worauf freut er sich?
Wir reden über das Projekt.
Worüber redet ihr?
Sie denkt an ihre Prüfung.
Woran denkt sie?
Use Präposition + Fragepronomen (wer/wen/wem) when the answer refers to a person. The Fragepronomen must match the case required by the preposition.
Er freut sich auf seinen Bruder.
Auf wen freut er sich?
Wir reden über unsere Lehrerin.
Über wen redet ihr?
Sie denkt an ihre Mutter.
An wen denkt sie?
The only spelling decision you have to make is whether to write wo- or wor- before the preposition. The rule is consistent and applies without exception.
When the preposition starts with a consonant (b, d, f, g, m, n, v, z…), attach wo directly. No r is added.
When the preposition starts with a vowel (a, e, i, o, u, ä, ö, ü), insert an r between wo and the preposition to keep the word pronounceable.
The table below lists the most common Pronominaladverbien you will encounter at A1–A2 level, together with a short example of each in use.
| Präposition | Wo(r)-Form | Bedeutung (EN) | Beispiel |
|---|---|---|---|
| mit | womit | with what | Womit schreibst du? |
| von | wovon | of / about what | Wovon träumst du? |
| für | wofür | for what | Wofür interessierst du dich? |
| über | worüber | about / over what | Worüber sprecht ihr? |
| an | woran | on / about what | Woran arbeitest du? |
| auf | worauf | on / for what | Worauf wartest du? |
| aus | woraus | out of / from what | Woraus ist der Tisch? |
| nach | wonach | for / after what | Wonach suchst du? |
| vor | wovor | in front of / afraid of what | Wovor hast du Angst? |
Each example below shows a statement followed by its matching Pronominaladverb question. Notice how the compound word absorbs the preposition entirely, leaving a clean, direct question.
Der Stuhl ist aus Holz.
Woraus ist der Stuhl?
Sache → woraus · aus begins with vowel → wor-
Ich warte auf den Zug.
Worauf wartest du?
Sache → worauf · auf begins with vowel → wor-
Wir ärgern uns über den Stau.
Worüber ärgert ihr euch?
Sache → worüber · über begins with vowel → wor-
Sie schreibt mit einem Füller.
Womit schreibt sie?
Sache → womit · mit begins with consonant → wo-
Er sucht nach seinem Schlüssel.
Wonach sucht er?
Sache → wonach · nach begins with consonant → wo-
The rule is simple: look at the first letter of the preposition. If it begins with a consonant, attach wo directly — for example, wo + mit = womit, wo + von = wovon. If it begins with a vowel, insert r to avoid a vowel clash — for example, wor + auf = worauf, wor + über = worüber. This rule applies without exception.
No. Wo(r) + Präposition forms like womit and worauf are only used to ask about things and concepts, never people. To ask about a person, you must use Präposition + wen/wem: Mit wem sprichst du? (Who are you talking with?) vs. Womit schreibst du? (What are you writing with?).
No. Pronominaladverbien like womit, wovon, worüber, woran are completely invariable. They do not change for gender (masculine, feminine, neuter), number (singular, plural), or case (nominative, accusative, dative). Once formed, the compound stays the same in every sentence.