Libor
辅导教师
Cases in Czech There are seven cases in Czech, and each one has a specific function. I will go through them in the order in which they appear in most Czech language textbooks. Nominative case (1. pád): The nominative is the case you can find in dictionaries. This case is used for the subject of a sentence. It answers the question “who?” or “what?”. Co to je? To je Praha. - What is it? This is Prague. If a Czech word is preceded by an one-letter, two-letter orthree-letter word, it is most likely a preposition. Prepositions also appear in English, but there is a big difference: Czech prepositions are never followed by the nominative case (1. pád). Now, different prepositions go hand in hand with different cases. And that’s basically the key to the secret. You need to know which preposition requires which case. For example... Genitive case (2. pád): It is used with prepositions od, z… and some others. Z PRAHY - FROM PRAGUE It is therefore important to know which case is associated with which preposition. We can look at that next time.
2024年2月13日 22:48
Libor
语言技能
保加利亚语, 克罗地亚语, 捷克语, 荷兰语, 英语, 法语, 德语, 希腊语, 意大利语, 其他, 波兰语, 俄语
学习语言
英语, 德语, 希腊语, 其他