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Serbian Alphabet

Word order

Verbs and Tenses

Nouns
   - Noun Declensions
   - Gender of nouns
   - Nominative case
   - Genitive case
   - Dative case
   - Accusative case
   - Locative case
   - Instrumental case
   - Vocative case
   - Irregular nouns

Pronouns

Adjectives

Prepositions

Adverbs

Question words


Serbian Nouns

Besides verbs, nouns constitute the major construct in any language, Serbian included.
 Meaning of nouns

Traditionally, nouns are defined as parts of speech that denote a person (e.g., Jim, student), a place (Belgrade), a thing (bread) or an abstraction. In addition nouns, like verbs, can describe an action (e.g., assassination, invasion); however, unlike verbs, nouns do not indicate tense, i.e., the time of an event.
 
 Gender of nouns

Each noun in Serbian is marked with an inherent gender. Serbian nouns are marked for three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter. These genders are grammatical, as opposed to natural or real genders since inanimate objects can be marked for masculine or feminine gender. For example, the noun ‘kuća’ (house) is feminine while ‘stan’ (apartment) is masculine. The gender of these nouns is determined by their ending, not their meaning.

 Number of nouns

Serbian has two numbers for nouns: singular, referring to one object, and plural, referring to more than one object. Example: kuća vs. kuće (house vs. houses).

 Cases of Nouns

We saw for verbs that verbs change their endings depending on their usage with respect to tense, aspect and voice and also the person (1st, 2nd, 3rd) or gender of the subject. These inflections of verbs are called conjugations or verb classes.

Analogous to verbs, nouns also change their form depending on their function in the sentence: e.g., subject, object, indirect object, etc. and depending on their gender (masculine, feminine and neuter). This is called case (or ‘padež’).

Serbian is a case-rich language, like Latin. Serebian has 7 cases! These are nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, instrumental, locative and vocative. Dative and locative cases have the same endings. Learning these 7 cases (for both singular and plural, and also for the three genders!) is the hardest task a beginner in Serbian will face. I hope that these pages will make this task easier. My suggestion is to tackle one case at a time for each noun, starting with the nominative case.

 Declension or classes of nouns

Related to case, we also have declensions or classes of nouns. Declensions refer to inflectional patterns of nouns indicating grammatical features such as number (singular, plural), gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and case (nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, instrumental, locative and vocative).

There are four declension classes in Serbian. Each noun belongs to one of these classes depending on its phonological form of the stem.

 

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