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Lesson 1 Intro Image
45
min

Lesson 1: Grammatical Gender

All Czech nouns have a grammatical gender. There are three genders (masculine, feminine, neutral). Although there is no direct connection with the English, there are certain rules which help to memorise the gender.

It can be understood like this:

  • Waiter is used for men
  • Waitress is used for women
  • Waiting staff is a neutral form

In Czech, it is crucial to know the gender of nouns as it may influence many other words in the sentence (adjectives, verbs, pronouns…).

It is logical when we describe people:

muž (man)
MUŽ – man
MasculineHE

žena (woman)
ŽENA – woman
FeminineSHE
dítě (child)
DÍTĚ – child
Neutral IT

Click each picture to hear the pronunciation.

However, in the Czech language, even inanimate objects have grammatical genders. In English, words such as cup, book and bicycle are always neutral – it. In Czech, they can be he, she or it.

hrnek (cup)
HRNEK – cup
MasculineHE
kniha (book)
KNIHA – book
FeminineSHE
kolo (bicycle)
KOLO – bicycle
Neutral IT

Unfortunately, there is not any logical explanation why words have certain gender. There are some basic rules based on which the gender can be recognised, however, there are many exceptions and the gender should be always learned together with the noun.

Masculine (ten)

The word indicating masculine gender is ten. It can be translated as the in English.

The dog is big. = Ten pes je velký.

The vast majority of masculine words end in a consonant.

pes (dog)
PES
dog
vlak (train)
VLAK
train

dům (house)
DŮM
house
BANÁN
banana

There are also some -a ending words which are masculine. However, this is not as widespread as the previous category. In rare cases, there can be even -e or -í endings.

chleba (bread)
CHLEBA
bread
KOLEGA
colleague
TURISTA
tourist
průvodce (tour guide)
PRŮVODCE
tour guide

Feminine (ta)

The word indicating feminine gender is ta. It is again translated as the in English.

The cat is small.= Ta kočka je malá.

The most typical ending for feminine nouns is -a.

kočka (cat)
KOČKA
cat
bota (shoe)
BOTA
shoe
ŠKOLA
school
ruka (hand)
RUKA
hand

Words which end in -e and -ě are commonly feminine, too. Some feminine words can also end in a consonant, which means consonant-ending words are not exclusively masculine.

restaurace (restaurant)
RESTAURACE
restaurant
LEDNICE
fridge
silnice (road)
SILNICE
road
kancelář (office)
KANCELÁŘ
office

Neutral (to)

The word indicating neutral gender is to. It also means the in English.

The car is slow. = To auto je pomalé.

Most neutral nouns end in -o.

auto (car)
AUTO
car
okno (window)
OKNO
window
tričko (T-shirt)
TRIČKO
T-shirt
mýdlo (soap)
MÝDLO
soap

Another typical ending is -í. There are also words ending in -e and -ě, which means these are not solely feminine ending.

náměstí (square)
NÁMĚSTÍ
square
nádraží (station)
NÁDRAŽÍ
station
vejce (egg)
VEJCE
egg
rajče (tomato)
RAJČE
tomato

During your studies, you will encounter endings being linked with an unusual gender. These irregularities were caused by natural language development over hundreds of years and have to be memorised.

You can identify the correct noun gender by looking at the right bottom corner in every image.

Grammar Flashcards

Do not forget to take a look at our flashcards. They enable you to generate random words for certain grammar points.

You can print out or download a one-page overview of this lesson. You can find this option at the top left corner of every lesson page.
Vocabulary
Homework:
A
Look around you in the room where you are and choose 10 different objects. Name them in Czech together with their gender.
You can use In the House vocabulary deck for new words and their genders. Don’t forget to share your results with other Czech Time students in the Discussion section below.
Test
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My Notes
Where Next
Discussion
Show homework tasks
A
Look around you in the room where you are and choose 10 different objects. Name them in Czech together with their gender.
You can use In the House vocabulary deck for new words and their genders. Don’t forget to share your results with other Czech Time students in the Discussion section below.