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Czech language
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====Case==== [[File:Bozeny Nemcove Revnice 6258.JPG|thumb|right|A street sign in German (top) and Czech (bottom) for a street named after [[Božena Němcová]] with her name declined in the genitive case in Czech (a sign probably from the time of the [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia|Protectorate]]).]] A [[nominative–accusative language]], Czech marks subject nouns of transitive and intransitive verbs in the nominative case, which is the form found in dictionaries, and [[direct object]]s of transitive verbs are declined in the accusative case.<ref name="n196" /> The vocative case is used to address people.<ref>{{Harvnb|Naughton|2005|p=201}}</ref> The remaining cases (genitive, dative, locative and instrumental) indicate semantic relationships, such as [[noun adjunct]]s (genitive), [[indirect object]]s (dative), or agents in passive constructions (instrumental).<ref>{{Harvnb|Naughton|2005|pp=197–199}}</ref> Additionally [[preposition]]s and some verbs require their complements to be declined in a certain case.<ref name="n196">{{Harvnb|Naughton|2005|p=196}}</ref> The locative case is only used after prepositions.<ref>{{Harvnb|Naughton|2005|p=199}}</ref> An adjective's case agrees with that of the noun it modifies. When Czech children learn their language's declension patterns, the cases are referred to by number:<ref name="Naughton 2005 25">{{Harvnb|Naughton|2005|p=25}}</ref> {{clear}} {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |+Cases in Czech |- !scope="col"|No. !scope="col"| Ordinal name (Czech) !scope="col"| Full name (Czech) !scope="col"| Case !scope="col"| Main usage |- |1. |''první pád'' | ''nominativ'' !scope="row"|[[nominative case|nominative]] | Subjects |- |2. |''druhý pád'' | ''genitiv'' !scope="row"|[[genitive case|genitive]] | Noun adjuncts, possession, prepositions of motion, time and location |- |3. | ''třetí pád'' | ''dativ'' !scope="row"|[[dative case|dative]] | Indirect objects, prepositions of motion |- |4. | ''čtvrtý pád'' | ''akuzativ'' !scope="row"|[[accusative case|accusative]] | Direct objects, prepositions of motion and time |- |5. |''pátý pád'' | ''vokativ'' !scope="row"|[[vocative case|vocative]] | Addressing someone |- |6. |''šestý pád'' | ''lokál'' !scope="row"|[[locative case|locative]] | Prepositions of location, time and topic |- |7. |''sedmý pád'' | ''instrumentál'' !scope="row"|[[instrumental case|instrumental]] | Passive agents, instruments, prepositions of location |} Some prepositions require the nouns they modify to take a particular case. The cases assigned by each preposition are based on the physical (or metaphorical) direction, or location, conveyed by it. For example, ''[[wikt:od|od]]'' (from, away from) and ''[[wikt:z#Czech|z]]'' (out of, off) assign the genitive case. Other prepositions take one of several cases, with their meaning dependent on the case; ''[[wikt:na#Czech|na]]'' means "on to" or "for" with the accusative case, but "on" with the locative.<ref>{{Harvnb|Naughton|2005|pp=201–205}}</ref> This is a glossed example of a sentence using several cases: {{interlinear|indent=3|abbreviations=INS:instrumental case |Nes-l js-em krabic-i do dom-u se sv-ým přítel-em. |carry-SG.M.PST be-1.SG box-SG.ACC into house-SG.GEN with own-SG.INS friend-SG.INS |I carried the box into the house with my friend.}}
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