Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds
In spoken Czech, the long vowel 'é' often shifts to 'í' to sound more natural and less formal.
- Shift 'é' to 'í' in most common adjectives (e.g., 'dobré' becomes 'dobrý').
- Apply this shift primarily in spoken, informal contexts, not in formal writing.
- Avoid the shift in high-register literature or official public speaking.
Neuter Adjective Shift
| Standard (Formal) | Spoken (Informal) | Example |
|---|---|---|
|
dobré
|
dobrý
|
To je dobrý.
|
|
hezké
|
hezký
|
To je hezký.
|
|
nové
|
nový
|
To je nový.
|
|
velké
|
velký
|
To je velký.
|
|
malé
|
malý
|
To je malý.
|
|
červené
|
červený
|
To je červený.
|
Meanings
This rule describes the phonological shift where the long vowel 'é' is replaced by 'í' in spoken Czech, particularly in adjective endings and some verb forms.
Adjectival Shift
The most common shift in neuter nominative/accusative singular adjective endings.
“To je hezký auto.”
“Je to velký překvapení.”
Reference Table
| Form | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
|
Affirmative
|
To je [adj+í]
|
To je hezký.
|
|
Negative
|
To není [adj+í]
|
To není hezký.
|
|
Question
|
Je to [adj+í]?
|
Je to hezký?
|
|
Short Answer
|
Je.
|
Je.
|
|
Comparison
|
Je to víc [adj+í].
|
Je to víc hezký.
|
|
Plural
|
Jsou [adj+é].
|
Jsou hezké.
|
격식 수준 스펙트럼
To je dobré auto. (Casual conversation)
To je dobré auto. (Casual conversation)
To je dobrý auto. (Casual conversation)
To je dobrý fáro. (Casual conversation)
The Shift Map
Context
- Pub Pub
- Chat Chat
수준별 예문
To je dobrý auto.
That is a good car.
Je to hezký počasí.
It is nice weather.
To je nový auto, co jsi koupil?
Is that the new car you bought?
To je fakt dobrý řešení problému.
That is actually a good solution to the problem.
혼동하기 쉬운
Learners think 'dobrý' is only masculine.
Learners shift nouns like 'město'.
Using it in writing.
자주 하는 실수
To je dobrý pivo.
To je dobré pivo.
Mám dobrý auto.
Mám dobré auto.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
Je to dobrý?
Je to dobré?
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
문장 패턴
To je ___ auto.
Je to ___?
To není ___.
Myslím, že je to ___.
Real World Usage
To je dobrý pivo.
To je hezký.
To je dobrý.
To je dobré.
To je hezký.
To je dobrý.
Listen to locals
Don't write it
Practice with friends
Be natural
Smart Tips
Use 'í' for neuter adjectives.
Stick to 'é'.
Use standard 'é'.
Use 'í'.
발음
Vowel length
Ensure the 'í' is long, not short.
Casual
To je dobrý! ↗
Friendly and open.
암기하기
기억법
Think of the 'é' as a formal suit and the 'í' as a comfortable t-shirt.
시각적 연상
Imagine a person wearing a tuxedo (é) changing into a t-shirt (í) as they walk into a pub.
Rhyme
When you're at the bar, don't be a bore, use 'í' instead of 'é' and speak like a pro.
Story
Petr is at a formal meeting. He says 'To je dobré.' Then he goes to a pub. He says 'To je dobrý!' His friends smile because he sounds like a local.
Word Web
챌린지
Spend 5 minutes today saying 10 sentences using 'í' instead of 'é' while looking in the mirror.
문화 노트
The shift is very common in Prague.
Brno has its own dialect, but the shift is still understood.
Ostrava has a very distinct dialect, but this shift is universal.
This shift comes from the natural evolution of spoken Czech.
대화 시작하기
Jaké je to auto?
Je to dobrý nápad?
Co říkáš na to nový auto?
Je to dobrý řešení?
일기 주제
자주 하는 실수
Test Yourself
To je ___ auto.
Find and fix the mistake:
To je dobrý auto (in a formal letter).
Je to ___?
To je dobré auto.
We use the shift in formal writing.
A: To je hezké auto. B: ___
To / dobrý / je / auto.
Which is informal?
Score: /8
연습 문제
8 exercisesTo je ___ auto.
Find and fix the mistake:
To je dobrý auto (in a formal letter).
Je to ___?
To je dobré auto.
We use the shift in formal writing.
A: To je hezké auto. B: ___
To / dobrý / je / auto.
Which is informal?
Score: /8
자주 묻는 질문 (8)
No, it's a natural feature of spoken Czech.
Only if it's a casual email to a friend.
No, it's just a phonetic shift.
It makes speech more fluid.
Mostly, yes.
Yes, if you want to sound like a local.
Yes, in formal speech.
You'll just sound a bit informal.
Scaffolded Practice
1
2
3
4
Mastery Progress
Needs Practice
Improving
Strong
Mastered
In Other Languages
None
Register is handled differently.
None
Phonology vs Syntax.
None
Dialectal variation.
None
Register is grammatical.
None
Diglossia is systemic.
None
Tones vs Vowels.