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🎨 AI Language Learning Infographic 🎯 infographic 📅 2026-06-02

German Cases Infographic with Secret Stories Alphabet Chart

Clean AI language learning infographic showing German nominative and accusative forms in a structured beginner table with English meanings, example sentences, arrows, and simple doodles. Duolingo-inspired green and yellow classroom poster style with sharp typography and a secret stories alphabet chart search focus.

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Beginner German cases infographic poster with a central nominative vs accusative table, English translations, arrows, doodles.
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Resolution1024 × 1024 px
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Ratio1024x1024
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File size197 KB
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StyleAI Language Learning Infographic
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Use caseinfographic
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Generated2026-06-02
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LanguageEnglish (EN)
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SEO targetsecret stories alphabet chart
Full generation prompt Click to expand
Language learning infographic titled "German Cases: Nominative and Accusative". VERB CONJUGATION TABLE (rows × tenses) adapted as a clear beginner grammar table with sharp typography. Clean educational poster, Duolingo-friendly, sketchnote style, Duolingo green and yellow palette, tasteful simple doodle imagery, no cultural stereotyping. Central table should be the main focus: rows = common German articles, pronouns, and simple example sentence patterns; columns = Nominative, Accusative, English meaning, and optional phonetic hint where helpful. Each cell shows original-language form alongside the English translation, for example: "der — the (masculine subject)", "den — the (masculine object)", "ein — a", "einen — a", "ich — I", "mich — me", "du — you", "dich — you", "er — he", "ihn — him", "sie — she", "sie — her", "wir — we", "uns — us". Include a beginner-friendly mini-pattern row such as "Der Hund sieht den Mann — The dog sees the man" and "Ich sehe den Apfel — I see the apple". Add small callout labels in English explaining: "Nominative = subject", "Accusative = direct object", "Who does the action?", "Who or what receives the action?". Optional small phonetic hints in English-style approximation only where useful, such as "ich (ikh)". Use arrows, boxes, and highlighted endings to visually compare forms, especially masculine article changes from nominative to accusative. Layout should feel like a classroom cheat sheet with playful sketchnote icons such as pencils, speech bubbles, check marks, and simple grammar symbols, but keep the table highly legible and structured. The target search intent should be reflected visually only through a clever chart-like secret-story feel, with no on-image text referring to that phrase. Linguistically accurate spelling and diacritics in both German examples and English labels. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no watermarks Linguistically accurate spelling and diacritics in BOTH the taught language and the label language. No cultural stereotyping. Tasteful imagery.