Cjelina 1: Dobro došli!

⚙️ 1 | 1 | Lekcija 6: Roditelji – Gramatika

What does it look like?

More about grammatical gender. Let’s talk about adjectives; how to describe something or someone.

James

🪧 Adjectives (Singular)

An adjective is a word that gives additional, descriptive information about a noun (big table, smart girl). At this point you have seen examples of how Croatian uses adjectives to modify nouns. Look at this set of sentences. Once you understand what they mean, look at the adjective endings and how these endings vary by the gender of the noun they describe. The adjective endings are marked in red.

masculine feminine neuter
Brat je lijep. Sestra je lijepa. Dijete je lijepo.
Brat je dobar. Sestra je dobra. Dijete je dobro.
Brat je pametan. Sestra je pametna. Dijete je pametno.

Adjective endings change according to the gender of the noun (masculine, feminine, neuter) and also the number (singular or plural) of the noun they modify, or describe. Note, we will learn about plural adjective endings later. It is crucial to know how the endings are spelled.

In order to form adjectives correctly, you start with the dictionary form of the adjective, which is always given in the masculine singular form. The masculine form is the base form, or stem, to which other gendered endings are added.

Be careful, sometimes when forming feminine and neuter adjectives, the spelling of the stem may change a little bit. For example, dobar and pametan are both masculine adjective forms.

What happens when you want to create a feminine and/or neuter form? Answer: you need to drop the final -(a) and then add the ending that matches the gender. Thus, in order to say “she is a good/nice person,” you will say: Ona je dobra. If you want to say that “a child is good/nice,” you will say: Dijete je dobro.

❓ What does it look like?

How to ask “What does it look like” — Kakav / Kakva / Kakvo

When you want to find out what someone looks like (What does he-she-it look like?), you will need to use one of the following forms:

  • Kakav je brat? — for masculine nouns (on)
  • Kakva je sestra? — for feminine nouns (ona)
  • Kakvo je dijete? — for neuter nouns (ono)

Keep in mind, as shown in the examples above, you always need to use the appropriate gender form of the question kakav, based on who-what you are referring to. Kakav itself is the masculine adjective form meaning ‘what kind?’ and it is used to ask about masculine singular nouns.

1.1 Zadatak 1. Kakav?

From the drop-down list, choose the correct question word to complete the sentence:

Now answer the questions about how things and people look. Fill in the missing words from the drop-down menu.Pay attention to the logical and grammatical context.

Note: at this point we are talking only about singular forms of the nouns and adjectives. In the near future, we will go over the plural forms for all three genders.

🪧 Possessive Pronouns

Answering about ownership

You learned that the words moj (my/mine) and tvoj (your/yours –singular) are modifiers that agree with the noun that they modify in gender (masculine, feminine, neuter).

Sentence with “my” Why?
Moj brat se zove Davor. moj — agrees with “brat”
Moja sestra se zove Sandra. moja — agrees with “sestra”
Moje dijete se zove Marin. moje — agrees with “dijete”
Sentence with “your” Why?
Tvoj prijatelj se zove James. tvoj — agrees with “prijatelj”
Tvoja prijateljica se zove Matija. tvoja — agrees with “prijateljica”
Tvoje dijete se zove Goran. tvoje — agrees with “dijete”
Sentence with “his” Why?
Njegov brat se zove Mario. njegov — agrees with “brat”
Njegova mama se zove Irena. njegova — agrees with “mama”
Njegovo dijete se zove Josip. njegovo — agrees with “dijete”
Sentence with “her” Why?
Njezin brat se zove James. njezin — agrees with “brat”
Njezina mama se zove Tamara. njezina — agrees with “mama”
Njezino dijete se zove Stjepan. njezino — agrees with “dijete”

Be careful: When referring to a neuter noun, you need to say:

  •  moje dijete, tvoje dijete
  • njegovo dijete, njezino dijete

The reason for this lies in the fact that both, moj and tvoj (dictionary forms) end in a palatal consonant (lj, nj, j, ć, đ, č, dž, š, ž). The final letter in these words ‘-j’ is a palatal consonant. The ending -e is used to signify neuter singular after the final palatal consonants in both moj and tvoj. You cannot say mojo dijete*, it has to be moje dijete.

1.1.6 Zadatak 2. Moje je…

Look at the list of the following items. How would you say that each item belongs to you?

  •  For example: ______ knjiga. → the answer will be Moja knjiga.

Then, after you complete each sentence with the correct form of my, answer how likely the statement is true for you (i.e., do you have the item or not).

  •  For example (still referring to a book): Točno ili netočno? / True or false? → Točno. This would imply that you do have/possess a book.

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