Most Confused German Words

Ranked by word frequency, the most commonly encountered confusable pairs appear first.

702,465 pairs , page 1 of 7025

Spelling & Dictionary Insight

The German confusables index tracks 2,006,359 word pairs in total, alongside 1,077,739 headword entries and 2,859 homophone records. The current view , "Most Confused", ranks pairs by a composite score combining both words' frequency ranks and their visual similarity, so the pairs most likely to cause real-world substitution errors surface first. Across the visible 7,025 pages, each row links to a side-by-side comparison page.

On this page, 0 of 100 pairs carry a stored explanation string, a short editor-written or data-derived note that states the distinction in plain language. The rest rely on the side-by-side definition table on their detail page to do the work. Pairs without an explanation are still fully indexed: their word1/word2/slug/confusion_score fields are populated, which is what lets the ranking sort work; the absence is purely in the narrative layer.

Confusable pairs are the class of spelling error that no automated spell-checker can catch, because every member of every pair is already a valid German dictionary word. Substitution errors (their/there, affect/effect, quiet/quite) survive every automated pass. PlainSpell's approach is to index the pair directly, word1, word2, a shared slug like "nach-vs-nicht", and the distinguishing fields, so readers can look up the comparison before they publish. The "Most Confused" ranking above surfaces the pairs with the highest collision probability first.