Dative Case in Czech
Dativ
This article is part of the Czech grammar tree on Settemila Lingue.
Overview
The dative case (3. pad) expresses the indirect object -- the recipient or beneficiary of an action. It also appears with certain verbs that inherently require dative objects (pomahat -- to help, rozumet -- to understand, verit -- to believe) and in common impersonal expressions (Je mi zima -- I am cold).
At the A2 level, the dative case is essential for expressing giving, telling, helping, and many emotional or physical states. It answers the question komu? cemu? (to whom? to what?) and is one of the most natural-feeling cases for English speakers, as it often corresponds to English "to someone."
The dative also plays a key role in Czech expressions of physical and emotional states, where it marks the experiencer: Je mi smutno (I am sad, literally "it is sad to me").
How It Works
Dative Singular Endings
| Pattern | Nom. | Dat. | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masc. animate (pan) | pan | panovi / panu | bratrovi (to brother) |
| Masc. inanimate (hrad) | hrad | hradu | domu (to house) |
| Feminine (zena) | zena | zene | mamince (to mom) |
| Neuter (mesto) | mesto | mestu | mestu (to city) |
Key Functions
- Indirect object: Davam knihu bratrovi. (I give the book to brother.)
- Verbs with dative: Pomaham mamince. (I help mom.)
- Experiencer: Je mi zima. (I am cold.)
- Age: Je mi dvacet let. (I am twenty years old.)
- With prepositions: k + dative (toward), kvuli + dative (because of)
Examples in Context
| Czech | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Davam knihu bratrovi. | I give the book to brother. | Indirect object |
| Pomaham mamince. | I help mom. | Verb with dative |
| Je mi zima. | I am cold. | Experiencer |
| Dekuji ti. | Thank you. | Clitic dative pronoun |
| Rekni mu to. | Tell him. | Pronoun dative |
| Je mi dvacet let. | I am twenty. | Age expression |
| Jdu k doktorovi. | I go to the doctor. | Preposition k |
| Kvuli tobE jsem prisel. | I came because of you. | Preposition kvuli |
| Rozumis mi? | Do you understand me? | Verb with dative |
| Verim ti. | I believe you. | Verb with dative |
Common Mistakes
Using Accusative Instead of Dative with Certain Verbs
- Wrong: Pomaham maminku. (accusative)
- Right: Pomaham mamince. (dative)
- Why: Pomahat (to help), rozumet (to understand), and verit (to believe) require dative objects. These must be memorized individually.
Forgetting the Dative in Experiencer Constructions
- Wrong: Ja jsem zima. (I am cold -- calque from English)
- Right: Je mi zima. (It is cold to me.)
- Why: Czech expresses physical and emotional states with an impersonal construction using dative for the experiencer.
Mixing Up -ovi and -u for Masculine Dative
- Wrong: Inconsistent use of the two masculine dative endings
- Right: Both bratrovi and bratru are acceptable, but -ovi is standard for animate nouns
- Why: For masculine animate nouns, -ovi is the full form and -u is a shorter variant. In standard Czech, -ovi is preferred.
Usage Notes
The dative experiencer construction (Je mi zima/teplo/smutno/veselo) is very common in spoken Czech and expresses states that English renders with "I am" + adjective. This pattern extends to many sensations: Je mi spatne (I feel sick), Je mi dobre (I feel good).
Practice Tips
- Gift-giving scenarios: Practice sentences with dat (to give), poslat (to send), rict (to tell) using different dative forms.
- State expressions: Learn the Je mi... pattern with common states: zima, teplo, smutno, veselo, spatne.
- Dative verb list: Make a list of verbs that require dative and practice them: pomahat, rozumet, verit, dekovat, patrit.
Related Concepts
- Prerequisite: Case System Introduction -- the seven-case framework
Prerequisite
Case System Introduction in CzechA1More A2 concepts
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