Slovak: Nominative Singular

Welcome to our first major post on decoding the Slovak language. If you’ve studied a Slavic language before, Slovak isn’t much different.

Nouns in Slovak are comprised of 3 genders: masculine, feminine and neuter.

And yes, their gender influences their declension [how word endings change to signal their role in a sentence].

This is why it’s key to know the gender of a word.

And, luckily for us, it’s rather easy to determine a word’s gender. Gender is determined by a noun’s ending.


Masculine
hard consonantdom
[house]
stôl
[table]
kvet
[flower]
pes
[dog]
jazyk
[language]
film
[movie]

Feminine
a or –iaruža
[rose]
žena
[woman]
mačka
[cat]
kniha
[book]
strana
[page]
fotograf ia
[photograph]
soft consonantposteľ
[bed]
kosť
[bone]
lekáreň
[chemist]
noc
[night]

neuter
esrdce
[heart]
pole
[field]
počasie
[weather]
oauto
[car]
pero
[feather]
rádio
[radio]
umcentrum
[center]
múzeum
[museum]

  • If a noun denotes a masculine person (muž, futbalista, etc.), then it is masculine regardless of its ending. The same goes for nouns denoting a feminine person.
  • Some exceptions are: deň m. [day], dieťa n. [child], cieľ m. [goal] and dievča n. [girl].

That’s all for this lesson.