A2 Case System 5 min read سهل

Nominative Case

The Nominative case is the subject's default form, featuring unique gender-based suffixes for definite articles.

Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

The Nominative case identifies the subject of a sentence—the person or thing performing the action.

  • The subject is always in the Nominative case: 'Maria citește' (Maria is reading).
  • Nouns in the dictionary form are Nominative: 'pisică' (cat).
  • It answers the questions 'Cine?' (Who?) or 'Ce?' (What?).
Subject (Nominative) + Verb + Object

نظرة عامة

Welcome to the heart of Romanian grammar. The Nominative case is your home base. It is the dictionary form of every noun.
Think of it as the default setting for words. You use it to name people, places, and things. It identifies the star of your sentence.
In Romanian, we call this Nominativ. It is the first case you ever learn. It is also the most frequent one you will use.
If you can name it, it is likely in the Nominative. It is simple, clean, and essential for every conversation.

كيف تعمل هذه القاعدة

Every sentence needs a hero. That hero is the subject. In Romanian, the subject always sits in the Nominative case.
This case answers two main questions: Cine? (Who?) and Ce? (What?). When you talk about yourself or others doing an action, you use this case. It does not just cover subjects, though.
It also covers words that describe the subject after the verb to be (a fi). For example, in
The coffee is hot,
both coffee and hot relate to the Nominative. Unlike English, Romanian nouns change their endings based on gender and number.
They also change depending on whether you mean a thing or the specific thing. Yes, the the is attached to the end of the word! Think of it like a grammar backpack that the noun always carries.

نمط التكوين

1
Building a Nominative noun follows a clear path. Follow these steps to get it right every time:
2
Find the gender of your noun (Masculine, Feminine, or Neuter).
3
Decide if the noun is Indefinite (a/an) or Definite (the).
4
For Indefinite Masculine: Use the base word. Add un before it. Example: un băiat (a boy).
5
For Definite Masculine: Add -ul or -le to the end. Example: băiatul (the boy).
6
For Indefinite Feminine: Add o before the word. Most end in . Example: o fată (a girl).
7
For Definite Feminine: Change the final to -a. Example: fata (the girl).
8
For Indefinite Neuter: Use un (singular) or niște (plural). Example: un scaun (a chair).
9
For Definite Neuter: Add -ul just like masculine words. Example: scaunul (the chair).
10
For Plurals: Masculine ends in -i, Feminine in -e or -i, Neuter in -uri or -e.

متى نستخدمها

Use the Nominative case when you are the one taking action. It is perfect for ordering food at a restaurant. You might say: O cafea, vă rog (A coffee, please).
Here, cafea is the subject of your request. Use it when introducing yourself in a job interview. Eu sunt Andrei (I am Andrei).
Both Eu and Andrei are Nominative. Use it for giving directions or naming landmarks. Muzeul este acolo (The museum is there).
Even when you are just pointing at things in a shop, you are using the Nominative. It is the language of labels and identities. If you are naming a cat, a car, or a feeling, you are using this case.
It is the most honest case because it doesn't hide behind complex prepositions.

متى لا نستخدمها

You must step away from the Nominative when things get complicated. Do not use it after most prepositions like cu (with), la (at), or pentru (for). While the forms often look the same, Romanian considers these Accusative. Do not use it to show possession.
If you want to say "the boy's book," the boy's name changes to the Genitive case. It is also not for direct objects. If you are the one being seen, rather than the one seeing, the function changes.
Think of the Nominative like a driver's seat. If you are in the passenger seat or the trunk, you are in a different case!

الأخطاء الشائعة

Many people forget the definite article suffix. They say băiat when they mean băiatul. This sounds like saying Boy is tall instead of
The boy is tall.
Another classic trip-up is the feminine definite form. Learners often keep the and add an -a. Remember, the -a replaces the . It is fata, not fatăa. Neuter plurals can also be a bit of a headache. Some end in -uri and others in -e. It takes practice to know which is which. Don't worry, even native speakers might hesitate on a rare word! Just remember: if it is the subject, keep it simple. If you feel like adding a complex ending you learned in a late-night study session, double-check if you really need it.

مقارنة مع أنماط مشابهة

The biggest confusion is between Nominative and Accusative. In Romanian, they look identical 99% of the time. The difference is all about the job the word does.
In Câinele vede pisica (The dog sees the cat), câinele is Nominative because it is doing the seeing. Pisica is Accusative because it is being seen. If you swap them, the meaning changes completely!
It is like a grammar traffic light. Green (Nominative) means go and act. Red (Accusative) means stop and receive the action.
Also, compare it to English. English uses word order. Romanian uses the same trick but adds those tiny suffixes at the end to make it official.

أسئلة شائعة

Q

Is the Nominative case hard?

Not at all! It is the easiest case because it is the word's natural state.

Q

Do adjectives change too?

Yes, they must match the noun in gender and number.

Q

Can I use Nominative for I have...?

Yes, the thing you have is actually the object, but the form remains the same.

Q

What if I forget the gender?

Use the indefinite un or o as a guess; people will still understand you!

Meanings

The Nominative case is the base form of nouns and pronouns used to identify the subject of a sentence.

1

Subject

The agent performing the verb.

“Ion mănâncă.”

“Mașina este roșie.”

2

Predicate Noun

Used after linking verbs like 'a fi' (to be).

“Ea este profesoară.”

“El este student.”

Nominative Noun Examples

Gender Singular Plural
Masculine băiat băieți
Feminine fată fete
Neuter scaun scaune

Reference Table

Reference table for Nominative Case
Gender Indefinite (A/An) Definite (The) Plural Definite
Masculine un băiat băiatul băieții
Feminine o fată fata fetele
Neuter un măr mărul merele
Masculine (vowel) un frate fratele frații
Feminine (vowel) o cafea cafeaua cafelele
Neuter (plural -uri) un cadou cadoul cadourile

طيف الرسمية

رسمي
Domnul citește.

Domnul citește. (Describing someone)

محايد
Bărbatul citește.

Bărbatul citește. (Describing someone)

غير رسمي
Tipul citește.

Tipul citește. (Describing someone)

عامية
Gagiul citește.

Gagiul citește. (Describing someone)

The World of Nominative

Nominative Case

Masculine

  • Băiatul The boy
  • Copacul The tree

Feminine

  • Fata The girl
  • Casa The house

Indefinite vs. Definite

Indefinite (A/An)
Un câine A dog
O pisică A cat
Definite (The)
Câinele The dog
Pisica The cat

Is it Nominative?

1

Is the noun doing the action?

YES ↓
NO
Check other cases.
2

Is it after the verb 'to be'?

YES ↓
NO
Check Accusative.
3

Is it a specific thing?

YES ↓
NO
Use Indefinite form.

Nominative in Action

Restaurant

  • Cafeaua
  • Nota
  • Meniul
💻

Office

  • Laptopul
  • Colegul
  • Șeful

Examples by Level

1

Pisica doarme.

The cat is sleeping.

1

Băiatul citește o carte.

The boy is reading a book.

1

Aceasta este casa mea.

This is my house.

1

Profesorul a devenit directorul școlii.

The teacher became the school principal.

1

Fiecare om are dreptul la opinie.

Every person has the right to an opinion.

1

Natura însăși ne oferă soluții.

Nature itself offers us solutions.

Easily Confused

Nominative Case مقابل Accusative Case

Both can look similar.

أخطاء شائعة

Pe Ion mănâncă.

Ion mănâncă.

Using Accusative 'Pe' with the subject.

Mărul este roșului.

Mărul este roșu.

Adding Genitive endings to adjectives.

Cine mănâncă mărul? Ion.

Ion mănâncă mărul.

Fragmented speech.

Eu sunt un medicul.

Eu sunt medic.

Overusing the definite article.

Pe ea este frumoasă.

Ea este frumoasă.

Confusing subject with object.

Câinii aleargă pe pisica.

Câinii aleargă pisica.

Mixing cases.

Ei este aici.

Ei sunt aici.

Agreement error.

Cartea este a lui Maria.

Cartea este a Mariei.

Incorrect genitive usage.

El devine un doctorul.

El devine doctor.

Article usage.

Nominativul este pentru obiecte.

Nominativul este pentru subiecte.

Conceptual error.

Aceasta este o problemă dificilă.

Aceasta este o problemă dificilă.

Actually correct, but often over-complicated.

Cine a făcut aceasta? Eu.

Eu am făcut aceasta.

Fragmented.

Fata care o văd este aici.

Fata pe care o văd este aici.

Missing accusative marker.

El este cel mai bun omul.

El este cel mai bun om.

Article error.

Sentence Patterns

___ este ___.

Real World Usage

Texting constant

Eu sunt acasă.

💡

The 'L' Rule

If a masculine noun ends in a consonant, just slap '-ul' on it to make it 'the'. It's like adding a tail to a kite!
⚠️

Watch the 'A'

Feminine nouns like 'casă' become 'casa'. Don't keep the 'ă'. One 'a' sound is enough for everyone.
🎯

Dictionary Secret

Whenever you look up a word in a Romanian dictionary, you are seeing it in the Nominative singular form.
💬

Polite Subjects

In Romania, using 'Dumneavoastră' (You - formal) is still Nominative. It's the polite way to be the subject of a sentence.

Smart Tips

Ask 'Cine?' (Who?)

Ion mănâncă. Cine mănâncă? Ion.

النطق

bă-IAt

Stress

The Nominative form is usually stressed on the penultimate syllable.

Declarative

Ion pleacă. ↘

Falling intonation for statements.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Nominative is the Name: It names the person doing the game.

Visual Association

Imagine a superhero standing at the front of a line. They are the 'Nominative' hero, the first one to act.

Rhyme

The Nominative is the start, it plays the leading part.

Story

Maria (Nominative) walks into a room. She sees a chair. She sits down. Maria is the subject of the story.

Word Web

subiectcineceacțiunenominativbază

تحدٍّ

Write 5 sentences about your day using only the Nominative case for the subject.

ملاحظات ثقافية

Romanians value directness in subject identification.

Derived from Latin 'nominativus'.

Conversation Starters

Cine este prietenul tău?

Journal Prompts

Descrie familia ta.

Test Yourself

Choose the correct definite form for the masculine noun 'prieten' (friend).

___ meu locuiește în București.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Prietenul
Masculine nouns ending in a consonant add '-ul' to become definite subjects.
Identify the correct indefinite feminine form for 'carte' (book).

Vreau să citesc ___ interesantă.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: o carte
'Carte' is feminine, so it uses the indefinite article 'o'.
Complete the sentence with the plural definite form of 'fereastră' (window).

___ sunt deschise.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ferestrele
The plural of 'fereastră' is 'ferestre', and the definite plural is 'ferestrele'.

Score: /3

تمارين تطبيقية

1 exercises
Identify the subject.

___ mănâncă un măr.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ion
Subject is Nominative.

Score: /1

الأسئلة الشائعة (1)

No, it's the base form.

In Other Languages

Spanish high

Sujeto

Spanish doesn't have a case system for nouns.

French high

Sujet

French lacks noun cases.

German moderate

Nominativ

German articles change more.

Japanese low

Ga/Wa

Particles vs. inflection.

Arabic moderate

Marfu

Arabic uses vowel endings.

Chinese low

Subject

Word order is everything.

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