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The Czech grammar allows you to manipulate the vocabulary to obtain multiple forms of a word. The grammatical rules below are the most important in Czech and help connect words or shape the structure. We start with the prepositions:
And: a ![]() |
Under: pod ![]() |
Before: před ![]() |
After: po ![]() |
Inside: uvnitř ![]() |
Outside: mimo ![]() |
With: s ![]() |
But: ale ![]() |
For: pro ![]() |
From: od, z ![]() |
To: na ![]() |
In: v ![]() |
To ask questions, use the following:
What?: Co? ![]() |
Who?: Kdo? ![]() |
How?: Jak (na to)? ![]() |
Why?: Proč? ![]() |
Where?: Kde? ![]() |
Some of the most important time adverbs:
Never: nikdy ![]() |
Rarely: zřídka ![]() |
Sometimes: někdy ![]() |
Usually: obvykle ![]() |
Always: vždy ![]() |
Very: velmi ![]() |
Most commonly used pronouns in Czech:
I: Já ![]() |
You: ty, vy ![]() |
He: on ![]() |
She: ona ![]() |
We: my ![]() |
They: oni, ony ![]() |
To express the possession of something [possessive form]:
My: můj, moje ![]() |
Your: tvůj, tvoje, vaše, váš ![]() |
His: jeho ![]() |
Her: její ![]() |
Our: náš ![]() |
Their: jejich ![]() |
Some random verbs to show how it's being used:
Some extra grammatical structures:
The above Czech grammar can provide tools to use in coordination with the Czech vocabulary to obtain some popular Czech phrases.
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Did you know? Grammar can help you increase your vocabulary dramatically. Grammar is like a tool which helps you manipulate words in a sentence by changing the shape and location of a word to create something new out of the old one. |