C10 M1 L3 Grammar

U10_M1_L3_Grammar
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10 | Modul 1: Gramatika

Budimo zajedno!

10 | 1 | Lekcija 3: Planovi za Dubrovnik

| The Noun DIO

The noun dio (part) is masculine in gender and it has the following declension pattern.

Case

Singular

Plural

Nominative

dio

dijelovi

Accusative

dio

dijelove

Dative

dijelu

dijelovima

Locative

dijelu

dijelovima

Instrumental

dijelom

dijelovima

Genitive

dijela

dijelova

| The Vocative Case - masculine gender

So far you have encountered situations in which our students call each other. Let's look at two examples in which our male students were called.

Davor

Onda, Davore, kako je bilo na vjenčanju?

Luka

Luka, što ti jedeš za doručak?

Mario

A ti, Mario? Što želiš raditi nakon što diplomiraš?

James

James, reci nam više o tvojem gradu?

When directly addressing someone, a personal name has to be in the Vocative case. It’s the only case that functions to address someone. Here are the rules you need to have in mind for Vocative Case when addressing someone with a masculine name:.

Luka, Vanja

Dario, Mario

Frane, Ante

Masculine names that end in –a, –o, and –e will have their forms equal to Nominative. No change occurs with these names.

James

John

Steve

Foreign names (if considered foreign in Croatian) will have the same form as the Nominative case. No change occurs with these names.

Davor

Adam

Names that end in a consonant will take the ending –e. Example: when one of our students in Croatia wants to call Davor, they need to say Davore.

Adam is a foreign name, but it fits with the naming system in Croatian, so it does take the ending –e (Adame, reci mi…).

Blaž

If a masculine name ends in a palatal consonant (i.e. Croatian letter): –č, –ć, –dž, –đ, –š, –ž, –lj, –nj, –j → they will take the ending –u. Example: Blažu, reci mi istinu.

Personal names, when in Vocative case, ALWAYS have to be separated by a comma in the sentence.

Davor

Onda, Davore, kako je bilo na vjenčanju?

Luka

Luka, što ti jedeš za doručak?

Mario

A ti, Mario? Što želiš raditi nakon što diplomiraš?

James

James, reci nam više o tvojem gradu?

| The Vocative Case - feminine gender

Let’s look at several examples when the Vocative is used for feminine gender. Have in mind, at the beginner-level, this is a simplified version of the Vocative case. There is much more on this topic to be discussed later. For now, you are only getting acquainted with the concept of the Vocative case.  

majka

Majko, mogu li ići u kino?

prijateljica

Prijateljice moja, drago mi je da te vidim!

Ljubica 

Ljubice, gdje si bila jučer?

Sonja

Sonja, kako si? Nismo se dugo vidjele.

Ines

Ines, zvala sam te! Nisi se javila.

The rules for feminine Vocative case:

nouns in –a

Most of the general nouns that end in –a will take the ending –o in the Vocative case

nouns in –ica

General nouns that end in –ica, and consist of two or more syllables, will take the ending –e in the Vocative case

personal names in –ica

Personal names such as Ljubica, Marica, or Katica will take the ending –e in the Vocative case

Personal names in –a

Many female personal names in –a will keep the same form as in the Nominative case

Foreign names

Female foreign names (Ines, Nives, or Dolores) will never change their forms

Images used in this document are from these sources.