Nominativ 1st Case Corrected
Nominativ 1st Case Corrected
The nominative endings for the three possible classes of Serbian nouns are given in Table 1
below.
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:
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’).
Nominative case is also used in copular or predicative sentences (sentences that use verb biti ‘to
be’ as the main verb). Some examples:
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’
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.
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’