Basic Adverbs in Czech
Základní Příslovce
Overview
Czech adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, expressing manner, place, time, and degree. Unlike adjectives, adverbs do not decline -- they have a single invariable form, which makes them refreshingly simple within Czech's otherwise heavily inflected grammar.
At the A1 level, learning common adverbs of place (tady, tam), time (ted, dnes, zitra), and manner (dobre, rychle, pomalu) dramatically expands your ability to add detail to sentences. Many Czech adverbs are derived from adjectives by changing the ending -y to -e or -o (e.g., rychly -> rychle, dobry -> dobre).
Since adverbs do not change form, they are one of the easier parts of Czech grammar to learn and use correctly from the beginning.
How It Works
Adverbs of Place
| Czech | English |
|---|---|
| tady/zde | here |
| tam | there |
| doma | at home |
| domu | homeward |
| nahore | up/upstairs |
| dole | down/downstairs |
| venku | outside |
| uvnitr | inside |
| blizko | near |
| daleko | far |
Adverbs of Time
| Czech | English |
|---|---|
| ted/nyni | now |
| dnes | today |
| vcera | yesterday |
| zitra | tomorrow |
| brzy/brzo | soon |
| pozde | late |
| casto | often |
| vzdy/vzdycky | always |
| obcas | sometimes |
Adverbs of Manner
Most are formed from adjectives: remove -y/-i and add -e/-o:
- rychly (quick) -> rychle (quickly)
- pomaly (slow) -> pomalu (slowly)
- dobry (good) -> dobre (well)
- spatny (bad) -> spatne (badly)
Examples in Context
| Czech | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Bydlim tady. | I live here. | Place |
| Prijdu zitra. | I'll come tomorrow. | Time |
| Mluvi dobre cesky. | He/She speaks Czech well. | Manner |
| Jdi rychle! | Go quickly! | Manner |
| Casto chodim do kina. | I often go to the cinema. | Frequency |
| Bydlim blizko. | I live nearby. | Place |
| Je pozde. | It's late. | Time |
| Dnes je hezky. | Today is nice. | Time |
| Pomalu, prosim. | Slowly, please. | Manner |
| Vzdy to tak delam. | I always do it that way. | Frequency |
Common Mistakes
Confusing Adverb and Adjective Forms
- Wrong: Mluvi dobry cesky. (using adjective form)
- Right: Mluvi dobre cesky.
- Why: When modifying a verb, use the adverb form (dobre), not the adjective (dobry).
Mixing Up Doma and Domu
- Wrong: Jdu doma. (I go at-home)
- Right: Jdu domu. (I go homeward)
- Why: Doma means "at home" (location). Domu means "homeward" (direction). Czech maintains this directional distinction.
Placing Adverbs Incorrectly
- Wrong: While Czech word order is flexible, placing adverbs after clitics can disrupt the clitic chain
- Right: Adverbs typically come before the verb or at the beginning/end of the clause
- Why: Though word order is relatively free, adverbs should not break the second-position clitic cluster.
Usage Notes
Czech adverbs of manner formed from adjectives are completely regular and productive. If you know the adjective, you can almost always form the adverb. This is one area where Czech is more regular than English.
Practice Tips
- Adjective-to-adverb conversion: Take a list of adjectives you know and form adverbs from them. Test yourself on the -e/-o ending.
- Time word daily practice: Each day, use dnes, vcera, zitra in sentences about your real activities.
- Describe actions: For any activity, add an adverb of manner: Mluvim pomalu. Jdu rychle. Pracuji dobre.
Related Concepts
- Next steps: Adverb Comparison -- comparative and superlative forms of adverbs
その他のA1の概念
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