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Nominativ 1st Case Corrected

The document discusses the nominative case in Serbian nouns. It describes the four declension classes in Serbian based on noun endings, provides examples of nominative case usage as subjects and in predicative sentences, and offers rules for classifying nouns. Exercises are included to practice identifying declension classes and translating nominative nouns.
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100% found this document useful (4 votes)
74 views4 pages

Nominativ 1st Case Corrected

The document discusses the nominative case in Serbian nouns. It describes the four declension classes in Serbian based on noun endings, provides examples of nominative case usage as subjects and in predicative sentences, and offers rules for classifying nouns. Exercises are included to practice identifying declension classes and translating nominative nouns.
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The Serbian Nominative Case: Endings and Usage

The nominative endings for the three possible classes of Serbian nouns are given in Table 1
below.

Table 1: The nominative case of Serbian nouns


Class I Class I Class II Class III
(masculine: (neuter: ending (feminine: ending (feminine:
SINGULAR ending in a in –o or –e) in -a) ending in a
consonant) consonant)
‘window’ ‘village’ ‘woman’ ‘love’

Nominative prozor selo žena ljubav


Jovan (John)
PLURAL ‘windows’ ‘villages’ “women” ‘loves’
Nominative prozor-i sel-a žen-e ljubav-i

Notice that nominative feminine singular nouns (žena ‘woman’) have the same –a ending as the
nominative neuter plural nouns (sela ‘villages’). It’s confusing, but you have to learn it. Can’t
sidestep the grammar!

How can you tell which noun belongs to which declension class? Follow these basic rules for
classifying nouns in declension classes:

i) If the noun ends in a consonant, most probably it’s a Class I masculine noun (e.g.
prozor ‘window’).
ii) If the noun ends in vowels –o, or -e in singular nominative case, it’s a Class I neuter
noun (e.g. sel-o ‘village’, polj-e ‘field’). However, there are some male proper names
that end in these vowels, and are classified as Class I masculine noun (e.g. Marko,
Rade), not neuter nouns. So, semantics wins!

Neuter nouns that denote young persons or animals have the regular nominative
ending in –o or –e, but their plural nominative ending is either –i, just like Class I
masculine nouns, or –ad. With the –ad ending, these nouns behave like collective
nouns. Some examples:

Table 2: Nominative endings of neuter nouns denoting young persons or animals


nominative momče ‘young unuče pile ‘chick’ tele ‘calf’
singular lad’ ‘grandchild’
nominative plural momčići ‘young unučići pilići ‘chicks’ teliići ‘calves’
-i: lads’ ‘grandchildren’
nominative plural momčad ‘young unučad pilad ‘chicks’ telad ‘calves’
-ad: lads’ ‘grandchildren’

iii) If the noun ends in –a in singular nominative case, it’s a Class II noun, and these
nouns are feminine. There is a small group of male-denoting nouns that also end in –
a, (e.g, sudija ‘judge’, Steva – male name, gazda ‘master, landlord’, gospoda
‘gentlemen’). But grammatically, these nouns act as feminine. So, forget about their
semantics.
iv) The Class III nouns are all feminine and end in a consonant, just like Class I nouns.
How then to distinguish Class I masculine nouns from Class III feminine nouns?
Class III nouns typically denote abstract objects (e. g. ljubav ‘love’, smrt ‘death’,
bolest ‘illness’, mladost ‘youth’).

Larisa Zlatic 1 Larisa Zlatic Language Services


http://w ww.studyserbian.com
This class of nouns is not productive, i.e. when a new noun that ends in a consonant
is imported into the language, it goes into Class I (masculine nouns), not into Class
III (feminine nouns). For example, the loan noun stres (from the English ‘stress’) is
classified as a Class I masculine noun.

When to use the nominative case in sentences?

 The nominative case is typically used as the subject of a sentence. As a


consequence, the nominative case can never appear after the preposition, unlike other
cases.
Notice that in the examples below, subjects can occur anywhere in the sentence, not only
in the initial position. Word order is pretty free. At least, something easy!

Table 3: Some examples of nominative nouns as subjects


Serbian English
1. Prozor je čist. The window is clean.
2. Jovan je došao iz Beograda. John came from Belgrade.
3. Ova žena dugo spava. This woman sleeps a lot.
4. Ja vidim moje selo. I see my village.
5. Čist je prozor. (Clean is the window. = same as 1.)
6. Došao je iz Beograda Jovan. (came from Belgrade John = same
meaning as in 2.)

Nominative case is also used in copular or predicative sentences (sentences that use verb biti ‘to
be’ as the main verb). Some examples:

Table 4: Some examples of nominative nouns in predicative sentences


Serbian English
Milan je lekar. Milan is a doctor.
Milan je bio dobar lekar. Milan was a good doctor.
Ovo je Beograd. This is Belgrade.
One su glumice. They are actresses.
Ja sam Larisa. I am Larisa.
Ja se zovem Larisa. I’m called Larisa (my name is Larisa)

Notice that in the above sentences, which are also called ‘identificational’ constructions, both
the subject (the noun before the conjugated verb biti ‘to be’) and the post-copular noun (shown in
red) have nominative case.

Unlike other cases that can occur as both objects of verbs and prepositions, nominative case
cannot occur as the object of a preposition. (Note: the locative case is the only case that occurs
only with prepositions.)

To ask questions about the nominative case (subject), such as ‘Who/What is that?’ we use the
following interrogative pronouns in the nominative case:
Ko ‘who’ Šta ‘what’

Table 5: Some examples of questions that ask about the subject


Serbian English
Question: Ko je došao? Who came?
Answer: Jovan je došao. John came.
Question: Ko je to? Who is that?

Larisa Zlatic 2 Larisa Zlatic Language Services


http://w ww.studyserbian.com
Answer: To je profesor. That is a professor.
Quesiton: Šta je ovo? What is this?
Answer: Ovo je prozor. This is a window.
Quesiton: Kako se zove ovo? How do you call this?
Answer: Ovo se zove knjiga. This is called a book.
Quesiton: Kako se kaže ‘book’? How do you say ‘book’?
Answer: Book se kaže ‘knjiga’. Book is called ‘knjiga’.

The last two questions can be very useful to find out how names of the objects or persons are
called in Serbian. So, don’t be shy and keep asking your teacher or a native speaker for the
names of the objects, so you can enrich your vocabulary, and also learn the nominative case.

Larisa Zlatic 3 Larisa Zlatic Language Services


http://w ww.studyserbian.com
And now some exercises! If you get stuck or are not sure you got it right, please email me
for help.

Exercise 1 – Put the nouns below in the appropriate declension class

Using the nouns below insert them in the appropriate cell of Table 5. An example is provided in
the first row of the table.
Miodrag (proper name) kafa ‘coffee’ zemlja ‘earth, soil’
Dragica (proper name) šećer ‘sugar’ mesec ‘moon’
Novi Sad (name of the city in Serbia) jare ‘kid –young goat’ zvezda ‘star’
Dalas ‘Dallas’ koza ‘goat’ ogledalo ‘mirror’
Florida voz ‘train’ čaša ‘glass’
Italija ‘Italy’ autobus ‘bus’ pasulj ‘beans’
Florida bol ‘pain’ veče ‘evening’
vreme ‘time, weather’ tuga ‘sadness’ zora ‘dawn’
život ‘life’ žalost ‘sorrow žito ‘wheat’
korito ‘trough’ bure ‘barrel’ pivo ‘beer’
vozač ‘driver’ zgrada ‘building’ zima ‘winter’

Table 6: Classify the above nouns in the appropriate declension classes

Class I Class I Class II (feminine Class III


(masculine nouns) (neuter nouns) nouns and some (feminine nouns)
masculine nouns)
nož pero trava radost
Miodrag vreme Florida bol
Novi Sad korito italija žalost
Dalas jare kafa
zivot bure koza
vozač ogledalo tuga
šećer veče zgrada
voz žito zemlja
autobus pivo zvezda
bol čaša
žalost zora
mesec zima
pasulj

Exercise 2 – Translate the following sentences


For this exercise you need to know both the present tense and past tense. The boldface nouns
require the nominative case. If you don’t have a bi-directional Serbian-English-Serbian
dictionary, you may go to the website: http://www.krstarica.com/dictionary/ to get the words you
need for this exercise. Note that for nouns, a dictionary will give you the nominative case forms.
1. This is a vase. Ovo je vaza.
2. Branko is a teacher. Branko je učitelj.
3. This is called a pear. Ovo se zove kruška.
4. This is called an apple. Ovo se zove jabuka.
5. That was my brother. Ovo je bio moj Brat.
6. What is that? šta je to?
7. They are accountants. Oni su računovođe.
8. What is Zorica? šta je Zorica?
9. She is a nurse. Ona je medicinska sestra.

Larisa Zlatic 4 Larisa Zlatic Language Services


http://w ww.studyserbian.com

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