A2 Case System 1 min read Fácil

Vocative Case for Direct Address (Oj! Hej!)

Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

The Vocative case is used exclusively to get someone's attention or address them directly in a sentence.

  • Use it to call out to a person: 'Marko, dođi ovamo!' (Marko, come here!)
  • Masculine nouns ending in a consonant often add -e: 'Prijatelj' becomes 'Prijatelju'.
  • Feminine nouns ending in -a often change to -o or -e: 'Ana' becomes 'Ano'.
Name (Vocative) + , + Message + !

Vocative Case Endings

Gender Nominative Vocative Example
Masculine
Ivan
Ivane
Ivane, dođi!
Masculine
Gospodin
Gospodine
Gospodine, izvolite!
Feminine
Ana
Ano
Ano, gdje si?
Feminine
Marija
Marijo
Marijo, čuješ li?
Plural
Prijatelji
Prijatelji
Prijatelji, idemo!
Neutral
Dijete
Dijete
Dijete, stani!

Meanings

The Vocative case is a grammatical case used to address a person or thing directly. It signals that the noun is the listener, not the subject or object of the action.

1

Direct Address

Calling a person by name or title.

“Marija, dođi!”

“Profesore, oprostite.”

Reference Table

Reference table for Vocative Case for Direct Address (Oj! Hej!)
Form Structure Example
Affirmative
Vocative + , + Verb
Marko, dođi!
Negative
Vocative + , + Ne + Verb
Marko, ne idi!
Question
Vocative + , + Question Word + Verb
Marko, gdje si?
Formal
Title + Name + , + Verb
Gospodine Horvat, dođite!
Plural
Vocative Plural + , + Verb
Prijatelji, slušajte!
Short Answer
Vocative + , + Da/Ne
Marko, da?

Espectro de formalidad

Formal
Profesore, molim vas.

Profesore, molim vas. (University)

Neutral
Profesore, molim.

Profesore, molim. (University)

Informal
Profesore, može?

Profesore, može? (University)

Jerga
Profesore, daj!

Profesore, daj! (University)

Vocative Case Logic

Vocative

Masculine

  • Ivane Ivan (addressed)

Feminine

  • Ano Ana (addressed)

Plural

  • Prijatelji Friends (addressed)

Ejemplos por nivel

1

Ana, dođi!

Ana, come!

2

Marko, zdravo!

Marko, hello!

3

Mama, gdje si?

Mom, where are you?

4

Tata, hvala.

Dad, thanks.

1

Profesore, oprostite.

Professor, excuse me.

2

Prijatelju, kako si?

Friend, how are you?

3

Ivane, jesi li spreman?

Ivan, are you ready?

4

Gospođo, izvolite.

Madam, here you go.

1

Gospodine Horvat, hvala na pozivu.

Mr. Horvat, thanks for the invitation.

2

Dragi prijatelji, dobrodošli!

Dear friends, welcome!

3

Marijo, zašto si to učinila?

Marija, why did you do that?

4

Kolege, moramo raditi brže.

Colleagues, we must work faster.

1

Čovječe, ne mogu vjerovati!

Man, I can't believe it!

2

Bože, pomozi nam.

God, help us.

3

Susede, možete li pomaknuti auto?

Neighbor, can you move the car?

4

Učitelju, razumijem li dobro?

Teacher, do I understand correctly?

1

O, sudbino, zašto si tako okrutna?

Oh, fate, why are you so cruel?

2

Pjesniče, tvoje su riječi duboke.

Poet, your words are deep.

3

Kralju, narod te čeka.

King, the people are waiting for you.

4

Oče, blagoslovi me.

Father, bless me.

1

Djevojko, tvoj je glas poput pjesme.

Girl, your voice is like a song.

2

Gospodine predsjedniče, imate li komentar?

Mr. President, do you have a comment?

3

Ljudi, zar ne vidite istinu?

People, don't you see the truth?

4

Sine, budi mudar.

Son, be wise.

Fácil de confundir

Vocative Case for Direct Address (Oj! Hej!) vs Nominative vs Vocative

Learners use Nominative for everything.

Vocative Case for Direct Address (Oj! Hej!) vs Genitive vs Vocative

Some endings overlap.

Vocative Case for Direct Address (Oj! Hej!) vs Vocative vs Accusative

Both can change endings.

Errores comunes

Ana, dođi!

Ano, dođi!

Feminine names ending in -a change to -o.

Ivan, gdje si?

Ivane, gdje si?

Masculine names add -e.

Prijatelj, dođi!

Prijatelju, dođi!

Masculine nouns add -u.

Mama, dođi.

Mama, dođi.

Some nouns like 'Mama' stay the same.

Gospodin, dođite.

Gospodine, dođite.

Titles must be inflected.

Marija, slušaj.

Marijo, slušaj.

Names ending in -ija change to -ijo.

Profesora, recite.

Profesore, recite.

Wrong case used.

Kolega, radite.

Kolega, radite.

Masculine nouns ending in -a (like Kolega) stay the same.

Prijatelji, dođite.

Prijatelji, dođite.

Actually correct, but often confused with singular.

Božo, pomozi.

Bože, pomozi.

Irregular vocative for God.

Kralja, čuj.

Kralju, čuj.

Incorrect vocative form.

Pjesnik, piši.

Pjesniče, piši.

Consonant shift needed.

Djevojka, dođi.

Djevojko, dođi.

Incorrect vocative form.

Patrones de oraciones

___, dođi ovamo!

___, možete li mi pomoći?

___, jesi li spreman za put?

___, hvala vam na svemu.

Real World Usage

Texting constant

Marko, jesi li tu?

University very common

Profesore, imam pitanje.

Restaurant common

Konobaru, molim račun.

Social Media common

Prijatelji, pogledajte ovo!

Job Interview occasional

Gospodine, hvala na prilici.

Travel common

Vozaču, stanite ovdje.

💡

The Comma Rule

Always put a comma after the Vocative noun if it starts the sentence.
⚠️

Don't over-inflect

Some names don't change. Check a dictionary if unsure.
🎯

Plural is easy

The plural Vocative is the same as the Nominative.
💬

Politeness

Using the Vocative with titles is very polite.

Smart Tips

Always check if the name needs an ending change.

Ivan, dođi. Ivane, dođi.

Use the Vocative for the greeting.

Poštovani Gospodin, Poštovani Gospodine,

Use the Vocative for the title.

Konobar, račun. Konobaru, račun.

Use the plural Vocative.

Prijatelj, slušajte. Prijatelji, slušajte.

Pronunciación

Ivane [i-va-ne]

Stress

The stress usually stays on the same syllable as the Nominative.

Calling

Marko! ↑

Rising intonation to get attention.

Memorízalo

Mnemotecnia

Vokativ is for the Voice calling out.

Asociación visual

Imagine a megaphone. When you speak into it, the person's name changes shape to fit the megaphone.

Rhyme

When you call a friend's name, change the end, it's not the same!

Story

Marko is walking down the street. I want to talk to him. I don't just shout 'Marko', I shout 'Marko-e' (Ivane/Marko). He turns around because he hears the special calling sound.

Word Web

IvaneAnoPrijateljuGospodineGospođoProfesore

Desafío

Go to a mirror and say 'Hello' to yourself using your own name in the Vocative case.

Notas culturales

Using the Vocative is a sign of respect and familiarity. Failing to use it can sound cold or distant.

Inherited from Proto-Slavic.

Inicios de conversación

Marko, što radiš danas?

Profesore, imate li trenutak?

Prijatelji, kamo idemo večeras?

Gospođo, možete li mi pomoći?

Temas para diario

Write a short note to a friend.
Write an email to a professor.
Write a dialogue between a waiter and a customer.
Write a speech to your colleagues.

Errores comunes

Incorrect

Correcto


Incorrect

Correcto


Incorrect

Correcto


Incorrect

Correcto

Test Yourself

Fill in the correct Vocative form.

___, dođi ovamo! (Ivan)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ivane
Masculine names add -e.
Choose the correct sentence. Opción múltiple

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ano, dođi!
Feminine names ending in -a change to -o.
Correct the sentence. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

Gospodin, recite.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Gospodine, recite.
Titles must be inflected.
Change to Vocative. Sentence Transformation

Marija -> ___

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Marijo
Names ending in -ija change to -ijo.
Is this true? True False Rule

The plural Vocative is the same as the Nominative.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: True
Yes, for most nouns.
Complete the dialogue. Dialogue Completion

A: ___? B: Da, molim?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Profesore
Addressing a professor.
Build the sentence. Sentence Building

Marko / dođi / ovdje

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Marko, dođi ovdje.
Wait, Marko doesn't change!
Match the name to the Vocative. Match Pairs

Match each item on the left with its pair on the right:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ivane, Ano
Correct inflections.

Score: /8

Ejercicios de practica

8 exercises
Fill in the correct Vocative form.

___, dođi ovamo! (Ivan)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ivane
Masculine names add -e.
Choose the correct sentence. Opción múltiple

Which is correct?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ano, dođi!
Feminine names ending in -a change to -o.
Correct the sentence. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

Gospodin, recite.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Gospodine, recite.
Titles must be inflected.
Change to Vocative. Sentence Transformation

Marija -> ___

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Marijo
Names ending in -ija change to -ijo.
Is this true? True False Rule

The plural Vocative is the same as the Nominative.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: True
Yes, for most nouns.
Complete the dialogue. Dialogue Completion

A: ___? B: Da, molim?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Profesore
Addressing a professor.
Build the sentence. Sentence Building

Marko / dođi / ovdje

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Marko, dođi ovdje.
Wait, Marko doesn't change!
Match the name to the Vocative. Match Pairs

Ivan -> ?, Ana -> ?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ivane, Ano
Correct inflections.

Score: /8

Preguntas frecuentes (8)

No, some names remain the same in the Vocative case.

The comma separates the address from the rest of the sentence.

Yes, especially in emails and letters.

You will be understood, but it might sound unnatural.

No, they are different cases with different functions.

Yes, it is essential for polite address.

Yes, like 'Bože' for 'Bog'.

Try addressing your friends using the Vocative.

Scaffolded Practice

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

Mastery Progress

Needs Practice

Improving

Strong

Mastered

In Other Languages

German low

Direct address (no case change)

Croatian changes the noun; German does not.

French low

Direct address (no case change)

Croatian changes the noun; French does not.

Spanish low

Direct address (no case change)

Croatian changes the noun; Spanish does not.

Japanese partial

Particle 'yo' or 'ne'

Croatian changes the noun itself.

Arabic partial

Vocative particle 'Ya'

Croatian changes the noun ending.

Chinese low

Direct address (no case change)

Croatian changes the noun; Chinese does not.

Learning Path

Prerequisites

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