Vowel Alternations in Locative (e.g., ruka -> ruci)
Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds
When feminine nouns ending in K, G, or H move to the Locative case, those letters change to C, Z, or S.
- K becomes C: ruka (hand) → u ruci (in the hand)
- G becomes Z: knjiga (book) → u knjizi (in the book)
- H becomes S: svrha (purpose) → o svrsi (about the purpose)
Sibilarization in Feminine Nouns (Locative/Dative)
| Nominative | Stem End | Locative/Dative | English |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Ruka
|
K
|
Ruci
|
Hand
|
|
Knjiga
|
G
|
Knjizi
|
Book
|
|
Svrha
|
H
|
Svrsi
|
Purpose
|
|
Noga
|
G
|
Nozi
|
Leg
|
|
Slika
|
K
|
Slici
|
Picture
|
|
Briga
|
G
|
Brizi
|
Worry
|
|
Snaga
|
G
|
Snazi
|
Strength
|
|
Majka
|
K
|
Majci
|
Mother
|
Meanings
A phonetic process where the velar consonants K, G, and H transform into the dental sibilants C, Z, and S when followed by the vowel 'i' in specific grammatical cases, most notably the Locative and Dative singular of feminine nouns.
Locative/Dative Singular (Feminine)
The most common usage for A2 learners, occurring when describing locations or targets for feminine nouns ending in -a.
“Sjedim na nogama.”
“Pišem o toj knjizi.”
Nominative Plural (Masculine)
Used when forming the plural of masculine nouns ending in K, G, or H.
“Vuk -> Vuci (Wolves)”
“Učenik -> Učenici (Students)”
Imperative Mood
Certain verbs undergo this change in their command forms.
“Peci! (from peći, root pek-)”
“Tezi! (from teći, root teg-)”
Reference Table
| Case | Gender | Ending | Example (Nom) | Example (Changed) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Locative Sing.
|
Feminine
|
-i
|
Ruka
|
U ruci
|
|
Dative Sing.
|
Feminine
|
-i
|
Knjiga
|
Knjizi
|
|
Nominative Plur.
|
Masculine
|
-i
|
Učenik
|
Učenici
|
|
Dative Plur.
|
Masculine
|
-ima
|
Vuk
|
Vucima
|
|
Locative Plur.
|
Masculine
|
-ima
|
Vuk
|
Vucima
|
|
Instrumental Plur.
|
Masculine
|
-ima
|
Vuk
|
Vucima
|
|
Imperative
|
Verb
|
-i
|
Rek- (root)
|
Reci!
|
격식 수준 스펙트럼
Navedena informacija se nalazi u knjizi. (General information)
To piše u knjizi. (General information)
Vidi u knjizi. (General information)
Ma, imaš to u knjizi, buraz. (General information)
The Sibilarization Triangle
K
- C as in Ruci
G
- Z as in Knjizi
H
- S as in Svrsi
Sibilarization vs. No Change
Should I change the consonant?
Does it end in K, G, or H?
Is it a personal name?
Is it a hypocoristic (e.g. Baka)?
Common Words with Sibilarization
Body
- • Ruci
- • Nozi
Objects
- • Knjizi
- • Slici
Abstract
- • Svrsi
- • Odluci
수준별 예문
Knjiga je u ruci.
The book is in the hand.
Ona piše u knjizi.
She is writing in the book.
Stojim na jednoj nozi.
I am standing on one leg.
Daj to majci.
Give that to mother.
U ovoj priči nema istine.
There is no truth in this story.
Na toj slici je moja kuća.
In that picture is my house.
Idem prema ljekarni.
I am going towards the pharmacy.
Reci mi sve o toj knjizi.
Tell me everything about that book.
U toj svrsi koristimo nove alate.
For that purpose, we use new tools.
Oni su pravi junaci.
They are real heroes.
U ovoj epohi sve je moguće.
In this epoch, everything is possible.
Bili smo u velikoj brizi.
We were in great worry.
U toj juhi ima previše soli.
There is too much salt in that soup.
Divim se tvojoj snazi.
I admire your strength.
U toj su se bitci borili hrabro.
They fought bravely in that battle.
Odluka leži u tvojoj odluci.
The decision lies in your decision.
U toj se psihologiji krije odgovor.
The answer lies in that psychology.
Nalazimo se u kritičnoj točki.
We are at a critical point.
U toj se zagonetki krije tajna.
A secret is hidden in that riddle.
Oni su vrsni stručnjaci.
They are top experts.
U toj se monografiji detaljno opisuje proces.
The process is described in detail in that monograph.
Pristupili smo toj problematici ozbiljno.
We approached that problematic seriously.
U toj se idili krije opasnost.
Danger is hidden in that idyll.
Oni su bili pobjednici u toj utrci.
They were the winners in that race.
혼동하기 쉬운
Both involve KGH changing sounds. Learners mix up which vowel triggers which change.
Jotacija also changes consonants but is triggered by 'j'.
Learners want to be consistent and change everything.
자주 하는 실수
u ruki
u ruci
u knjigi
u knjizi
na nogi
na nozi
o svrhi
o svrsi
u Luci
u Luki
mojoj baci
mojoj baki
u točki
u točci
u eposi
u epohi
u psihi
u psisi
vuki
vuci
u mazzi
u mazgi
u zagonetci
u zagonetki
문장 패턴
U ___ (noun) se nalazi ___.
Pričamo o ___ (noun).
Daj to ___ (person/noun).
Oni su ___ (masculine plural).
Real World Usage
Javi kad budeš u ruci s kavom!
U ovoj sam knjizi opisao svoje iskustvo.
Može li bez soli u juhi?
Nova slika! Pogledajte me na ovoj slici.
Skrenite na prvoj točci.
Boli me u ovoj nozi.
The 'Baka' Rule
Names are Sacred
Listen for the 'S'
Dialectal Freedom
Smart Tips
Stop and think of the word 'učenici' (students). If you know 'učenici', you know K becomes C!
Ignore the rule! Names are 'protected' from sibilarization.
Think of a Zebra. G becomes Z.
Keep the stem stable. Modern loanwords often skip the old Slavic shifts.
발음
Soft C
The 'C' in 'ruci' is always dental (like 'ts' in 'cats'), never like 'k'.
Voiced Z
The 'Z' in 'knjizi' is voiced, like the 'z' in 'zebra'.
Sharp S
The 'S' in 'svrsi' is a sharp hiss, like 'snake'.
Falling tone on 'i'
u rùci ↘
Standard locative emphasis.
암기하기
기억법
Keep Great Hopes (KGH) to See Zebra Clouds (CZS).
시각적 연상
Imagine a King (K) turning into a Cat (C), a Giant (G) turning into a Zebra (Z), and a Hero (H) turning into a Snake (S) as they walk into a room labeled 'Locative'.
Rhyme
K to C, G to Z, H to S, makes your Locative a success!
Story
Luka was holding a 'knjiga' in his 'ruka'. He stepped into the Locative library, and suddenly the 'knjiga' was 'u knjizi' and his 'ruka' was 'u ruci'. He was so surprised he stood on one 'nozi'!
Word Web
챌린지
Look around your room. Find three things that end in -ka or -ga. Say 'It is in the [thing]' using the correct sibilarization form.
문화 노트
The standard language is very strict about these changes in formal writing.
In some northern dialects, these changes are often skipped in casual speech.
Dalmatians might shorten the ending, but the sibilarization usually remains.
This comes from the Second Slavic Palatalization, which occurred around the 6th or 7th century AD.
대화 시작하기
Što držiš u ruci?
O kojoj knjizi voliš pričati?
U kojoj se svrsi koristi ovaj alat?
Na kojoj si nozi stajao kad si pao?
일기 주제
자주 하는 실수
Test Yourself
Knjiga je u ___ (ruka).
Choose the correct sentence:
Find and fix the mistake:
Stojim na jednoj nogi.
Učenik je ovdje. -> ___ su ovdje.
Personal names like 'Luka' undergo sibilarization in the Dative case.
- Gdje je tvoja sestra? - Ona je u ___ (ljekarna).
Words: Ruka, Baka, Knjiga, Luka
Match each item on the left with its pair on the right:
Score: /8
연습 문제
8 exercisesKnjiga je u ___ (ruka).
Choose the correct sentence:
Find and fix the mistake:
Stojim na jednoj nogi.
Učenik je ovdje. -> ___ su ovdje.
Personal names like 'Luka' undergo sibilarization in the Dative case.
- Gdje je tvoja sestra? - Ona je u ___ (ljekarna).
Words: Ruka, Baka, Knjiga, Luka
1. Svrha, 2. Noga, 3. Slika
Score: /8
자주 묻는 질문 (8)
It's due to a historical sound shift called Sibilarization. The 'k' softens to 'c' before the 'i' ending to make it easier to pronounce.
Yes, for masculine nouns in the Nominative plural (e.g., `učenik` -> `učenici`) and Dative/Locative/Instrumental plural (e.g., `vucima`).
Personal names are exceptions. We say `Luki` to keep the name recognizable.
Both are used, but `točci` is the traditional standard. However, many modern speakers prefer `točki` to keep the root clear.
Yes, in the imperative (commands) of some verbs, like `reci` (tell) from the root `rek-`.
Hypocoristics (family nicknames) usually resist the change to maintain their 'cute' and recognizable form.
Yes, the rule is virtually identical in Serbian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin.
Use the mnemonic: **K**ats **C**limb, **G**iraffes **Z**igzag, **H**ippos **S**wim.
Scaffolded Practice
1
2
3
4
Mastery Progress
Needs Practice
Improving
Strong
Mastered
In Other Languages
None
Spanish maintains the 'k' sound (written as 'qu') in 'amigo -> amigos'.
C/G softening
French changes are purely phonetic, while Croatian changes are triggered by grammar.
Umlaut
German changes vowels; Croatian changes consonants.
Te-form alternations
Japanese applies this to verbs; Croatian applies it mostly to nouns.
Root system
Arabic root consonants are stable; Croatian ones are not.
None
Chinese has no grammatical cases.