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The morphology of the
Polish language Polish (Polish: ''język polski'', , ''polszczyzna'' or simply ''polski'', ) is a West Slavic language of the Lechitic group written in the Latin script. It is spoken primarily in Poland and serves as the native language of the Poles. In ad ...
is characterised by a fairly regular system of
inflection In linguistic morphology, inflection (or inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, mood, animacy, and ...
(conjugation and declension) as well as word formation. Certain regular or common alternations apply across the Polish morphological system, affecting word formation and inflection of various parts of speech. These are described below, mostly with reference to the orthographic rather than the
phonological Phonology is the branch of linguistics that studies how languages or dialects systematically organize their sounds or, for sign languages, their constituent parts of signs. The term can also refer specifically to the sound or sign system of a ...
system for clarity.


Morphophonologic alternations

*Consonants in clusters and at the end of words are affected by the voicing rules; these are generally not reflected in the spelling. For example, the ''d'' in ''sąd'' ("court") is pronounced , while in inflected forms such as the plural ''sądy'' it is pronounced . *The vowels ''i'' and ''y'' have restricted distribution: ''i'' does not occur (except in some words of foreign origin) after ''c'', ''cz'', ''d'', ''dz'', ''dż'', ''ł'', ''r'', ''sz'', ''t'', ''ż/rz'', while ''y'' does not occur after ''k'', ''g'', ''l'' and palatal consonants. This means that in certain inflectional forms ''i'' appears in place of the expected ''y'' or vice versa (for example, the genitive of ''mąka'' "flour" is ''mąki'', not ''*mąky''). *The declension endings starting with the vowel ''e'' or ''i'' (except for the instrumental singular ''-em'') have the effect of palatalizing the preceding consonant. Due to historical developments, the actual effect is dependent on the consonant. *** don't change ****''i'' changes to ''y'' after **** adjectival stem that ends in ''sz ż'' + masculine personal plural ''-i'' > ''si zi'' (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (e.g. ) *** > (spelled ''rz''; e.g. ) *** > **** a noun ending in ''k'' + ''-em'' > ''kiem'' **** a noun ending in ''k'' + plural ''i'' > ''ki'' or ''cy'' *** > **** a noun ending in ''g'' + ''-em'' > **** a noun ending in ''g'' + plural ''i'' > ''gi'' or ''dzy'' *** > **** a noun ending in ''ch'' + plural ''i'' > ''si'' or ''chy'' *Some words are subject to certain vowel alternations, caused by historical sound changes in Polish. The alternations are as follows (they do not apply to all words containing these vowels): **Alternations that depend on whether the syllable is closed or open: ***''ó–o'' (e.g. ''rób – robić'') ***''ą–ę'' (e.g. ''dąb – dęby'') *** (occasionally )-∅ (e.g. , , ) **Alternations that take effect when the following consonant is modified by a palatalizing ending *** ''a–e'' (e.g. ''wiara – wierze'') *** ''o'' (or ''ó'')''–e'' (e.g. )


Nouns

Declension In linguistics, declension (verb: ''to decline'') is the changing of the form of a word, generally to express its syntactic function in the sentence, by way of some inflection. Declensions may apply to nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and ...
s are generally divided into ''hard'' and ''soft'' declensions. Soft declensions are used when the stem of the noun ends in a soft (postalveolar or palatal-like) consonant in all forms, while hard declensions are used by nouns with stems ending in a hard consonant in some (but not necessarily all) forms. Some nouns follow the adjectival declension (see below), particularly if they are masculine nouns ending in ''-y/i''. This applies even to some words with no apparent adjectival connection, such as ''Jerzy'' ("George"). Certain neuter nouns, mostly place names such as ''Zakopane'' and
voivodeship A voivodeship is the area administered by a voivode (Governor) in several countries of central and eastern Europe. Voivodeships have existed since medieval times and the area of extent of voivodeship resembles that of a duchy in western medieval ...
names such as ''
Wielkopolskie Greater Poland Voivodeship ( pl, Województwo wielkopolskie; ), also known as Wielkopolska Voivodeship, Wielkopolska Province, or Greater Poland Province, is a voivodeship, or province, in west-central Poland. It was created on 1 January 1999 o ...
'' when used alone as nouns, follow the adjectival declension but take ''-em'' rather than ''-ym'' in the instrumental and locative. The following generalisations can be made for the inflection of all nouns: * The nominative and vocative plural are always identical. * For neuter nouns, the nominative, accusative and vocative are always identical in both singular and plural. * The accusative of masculine nouns is identical to either the nominative or the genitive. * The locative, dative and instrumental plural almost always have the same endings (''-ach'', ''-om'', ''-ami'') no matter how the noun is declined.


Masculine nouns

Masculine nouns typically end in a consonant and those inflect according to the masculine declension. Masculine nouns ending in ''-a'' (usually personal) follow the feminine declension in the singular, and the masculine declension in the plural. The same applies to male personal names in ''-o'' (as '' Kościuszko''; also ''tato'' "dad"), although familiar first name forms like ''Franio'' follow the masculine declension throughout. The following table shows the endings shared by all masculine nouns: 1 Some nouns ending in a palatal consonant (for example ''gość, koń, liść'') may take the ending ''-mi'' instead of ''-ami;'' also ''pieniądz – pieniędzmi.'' 2 Except for personal nouns ending in ''-ec'', mainly ''chłopiec – chłopcze'' ("boy"), ''młodzieniec – młodzieńcze'' ("a young person"), ''ojciec – ojcze'' ("father"), ''starzec – starcze'' ("an old person"). The rest of the cases are different for 5 different declension groups: * declension I – all nouns ending in ''ć, dź, ń, ś, ź, l, j'' and nouns ending in ''p, b, m, w'' that gain palatalization in the oblique cases (for example ''karp – karpia, paw – pawia'') ** dative singular ending is ''-owi'' ** locative singular ending is ''-u'' ** nominative plural is ''-e'' for non-personal nouns, and ''-e'' or ''-owie'' for personal nouns ** genitive plural is ''-i'' or ''-ów'' * declension II – all nouns ending in ''c, cz, dz, dż, rz, sz, ż'' ** dative singular ending is ''-owi'' or ''-u'' ** locative singular ending is ''-u'' ** nominative plural is ''-e'' for non-personal nouns, and ''-e, -y'' or ''-owie'' for personal nouns ** genitive plural is ''-y'' or ''-ów'' * declension III – all nouns ending in ''k, g, ch'' ** dative singular ending is ''-owi'' ** locative singular ending is ''-u'' ** nominative plural is ''-ki, -gi, -chy'', respectively, for non-personal nouns, and ''-owie'' or ''-cy, -dzy, -si'', respectively, for personal nouns ** genitive plural is ''-ów'' * declension IV – all nouns ending in ''d, f, ł, n, r, s, t, z'' and nouns ending in ''p, b, m, w'' that do not gain palatalization in the oblique cases ** dative singular ending is ''-owi'' or ''-u'' ** locative singular ending is ''-e'' ** nominative plural is ''-y'' for non-personal nouns, and ''-i'' or ''-owie'' for personal nouns (the sequence ''r'' + ''i'' turns into ''rzy'') ** genitive plural is ''-ów'' * declension V – personal nouns ending in ''-anin'' ** dative singular ending is ''-owi'' ** locative singular ending is ''-e'' ** nominative plural is ''-anie'' ** genitive plural is ''-an'' or ''-anów'' The following table compares all five declension groups: Note also: * Many personal nouns, especially those ending in ''-og'' (equivalent to the English ''-ogist''), can take both forms of the nominative plural, with one form more frequent than the other for no apparent reason. *Personal nouns can become non-personal in the plural to form "depreciative forms", which convey negative attitude; for example ''policjanty'' instead of ''policjanci'' ("policemen") or ''ministry'' instead of ''ministrowie'' ("ministers"). Sometimes the ending may be the same, but the change of gender is conveyed through adjectives and pronouns agreeing with the noun, for example ''te wstrętne burżuje'' instead of ''ci wstrętni burżuje'' ("those disgusting bourgeois"). Irregularities in masculine nouns: * The vocative singular of ''Bóg'' ("God") is ''Boże''. * In the plural, the stem of ''brat'' ("brother") is ''braci-'' (nominative ''bracia'', genitive ''braci,'' instrumental ''braćmi''). *The stem of ("baptism") for oblique cases is (genitive ), inflected according to the fourth declension (except for the accusative singular, which is equivalent to the nominative). *''Człowiek'' ("person, human") has a suppletive plural ''ludzie'', inflected according to the first declension (the genitive is ''ludzi'', the instrumental is ''ludźmi''). *The declension of ''dech'' (archaic for "breath", used mainly in set phrases) is ''tchu, tchu/tchowi, dech, tchem, tchu, tchu.'' *The noun ''deszcz'' ("rain") has an archaic genitive ''dżdżu'', used in the phrase ''łaknąć/pragnąć jak kania dżdżu'' ("to desire dearly", lit. "to desire like a
kite A kite is a tethered heavier-than-air or lighter-than-air craft with wing surfaces that react against the air to create lift and drag forces. A kite consists of wings, tethers and anchors. Kites often have a bridle and tail to guide the fac ...
" or "to desire like a
parasol mushroom ''Macrolepiota procera'', the parasol mushroom, is a basidiomycete fungus with a large, prominent fruiting body resembling a parasol. It is a fairly common species on well-drained soils. It is found solitary or in groups and fairy rings in pas ...
" – both names, of the bird and of the mushroom, are homonymous in Polish and there's no consensus as to which the proverb refers). * The vocative singular of ''ksiądz'' ("priest") is ''księże''. Its plural declension is ''księża, księży, księżom, księży, księżmi, księża.'' * The declension of the noun ''książę'' ("prince") is ''książę, księcia, księciu, księcia, księciem, księciu, książę'' in the singular, and ''książęta, książąt, książętom, książeta, książętami, książętom, książętami, książęta'' in the plural. * The genitive plural of ''przyjaciel'' ("friend") is ''przyjaciół,'' the dative plural is ''przyjaciołom'', the instrumental plural is ''przyjaciółmi,'' and the locative plural is ''przyjaciołach.'' * The nouns ''pan'' ("Mr"), ''syn'' ("son") and ''dom'' ("house") have ''-u'' in the locative and vocative singular despite belonging to the fourth declension group; ''pan'' has vocative ''panie''. * ''Rok'' ("year") has a suppletive neuter plural ''lata.'' * The declension of the nouns ''sędzia'' ("judge") and ''hrabia'' ("count") is ''sędzia/hrabia, sędziego/hrabiego, sędziemu/hrabiemu, sędziego/hrabiego, sędzią/hrabią, sędzi/hrabi, sędzio/hrabio'' in the singular, and ''sędziowie/hrabiowie, sędziów/hrabi, sędziom/hrabiom, sędziów/hrabiów, sędziami/hrabiami, sędziach/hrabiach, sędziowie/hrabiowie.'' * A few masculines have plurals in ''-a'', usually as an alternative to the regular plural (e.g. the nominative plural of ''cud'' can be ''cudy'' or ''cuda'').


Feminine nouns

Feminine nouns usually end in ''-a'', although a few end in ''-i''. These are the "a-stem" nouns. A number of feminine nouns ends in a soft or hardened consonant; these are "i-stem" nouns. The following table shows the feminine a-stem declension: * Feminine nouns in ''-i'' (like ''gospodyni'' "housewife") have this ''-i'' only in the nominative and vocative singular. In all other cases they decline like soft a-stem nouns. * Soft feminine nouns that are familiar forms of personal names (like ''Ania'', from ''Anna'') have a vocative in ''-u'' (''Aniu'') or with no ending. The following table shows the feminine i-stem declension: * Some feminine i-stem nouns, especially those in ''-ość'' (a suffix used to form nouns from adjectives) have N/A/V/G plural in ''-y/i'' rather than ''-e''. * Nouns with the suffix ''-ość'', as well as a few other nouns (such as ''gość'' "guest" and ''dłoń'' "palm") form the instrumental plural by adding just ''-mi'' rather than ''-ami''.


Neuter nouns

Neuter nouns end in ''-o'' or ''-e'', these are the hard and soft neuter "o-stems". A few end in ''-ę'', the so-called "n-stem" and "t-stem" nouns. The following table shows the neuter o-stem declension: * Some neuter nouns take ''-y/i'' in the genitive plural, particularly those ending in ''-e'' that have a prefix (e.g. ''narzędzie'' "tool", G pl. ''narzędzi''). * Some neuter nouns that were borrowed from Latin end in ''-um''. These are indeclinable in the singular (always ''-um'') but follow the hard or soft neuter declension in the plural. The neuter n-stem and neuter t-stem nouns decline as soft neuter o-stems in the singular but as hard neuter o-stems in the plural. In addition, they have shortened nominative/accusative/vocative singular forms ending in ''-ę''.


Irregular nouns

Notable irregular forms include the following: *''dziecko'' ("child") has plural N/A/V/G ''dzieci'' (I ''dziećmi''; D ''dzieciom'' etc.). *''ręka'' ("arm, hand") has N/A/V plural ''ręce'' (also alternative L singular ''ręku'' and I plural ''rękoma''); ''oko'' ("eye") and ''ucho'' ("ear") have plural ''oczy/uszy'' etc. (G ''oczu/uszu''). These derive from old dual forms. *''pani'' ("lady, Mrs") has accusative singular ''panią''.


Invariant nouns

The following types of nouns are generally invariant, and do not inflect at all: * Names of letters * Some foreign-derived words that do not fit any standard pattern * Most foreign place names (except well-known ones that fit a standard pattern) * Personal names of females that don't end in ''-a'' * Normally masculine nouns used as feminines to refer to women (often preceded by ''pani'', which is declined, as in ''pani profesor'') * Titles of works etc. that do not have the form of nouns/adjectives * Nouns that are already inflected (e.g. ''Chrobrego'', a genitive, which can be used unchanged in all cases as short for a street name such as ''ulica Chrobrego'') * Names preceded by a specifying noun (for example ''wieś Dębowo'', "the village of Dębowo", where only ''wieś'' is declined * Names of
gmina The gmina (Polish: , plural ''gminy'' , from German ''Gemeinde'' meaning ''commune'') is the principal unit of the administrative division of Poland, similar to a municipality. , there were 2,477 gminas throughout the country, encompassing over 4 ...
s such as ''gmina Czersk'') Foreign personal names of males are declined if at all possible; some special rules are applied depending on the original language. Those that end "-y" or "-i" generally follow the adjectival declension, but these are treated as ''-i'', i.e. the previous consonant is soft, and this is shown in inflected written forms such as ''Tony'ego''.


Adjectives

Adjectives agree with the noun they modify in terms of gender and number. They are declined according to the following pattern ( means "proud"): Most short adjectives have a comparative form in or , and a superlative obtained by prefixing to the comparative. For example, ("cheap") has the forms ("cheaper") and ("cheapest") (these forms are inflected like normal adjectives). The following principles apply: *The longer ending is used in certain adjectives, especially those in consonant+, for pronounceability: ("pretty–prettier"). *The adjectival ending or is dropped, as in ("short(er)"), ("wide(r)"). *Irregular comparatives include (from "good"), (from "bad"), (from "big"), (from "small"), (from "narrow"), (from "long"). *For adjectives that do not have such forms, the words ("more") and ("most") are used before the adjective to make comparative and superlative phrases. Adverbs are formed from adjectives with the ending , or in some cases . Comparatives of adverbs are formed (where they exist) with the ending . Superlatives have the prefix as for adjectives. Irregular comparatives include ("better"), ("worse"), ("more", also when not concerned with quantity, from "very"), ("less").


Pronouns

This section gives the declensions of Polish pronouns. For information on meanings and usage, see ''
Pronouns In linguistics and grammar, a pronoun ( abbreviated ) is a word or a group of words that one may substitute for a noun or noun phrase. Pronouns have traditionally been regarded as one of the parts of speech, but some modern theorists would not ...
'' in the article on Polish grammar.


Personal pronouns

*1st person singular N ''ja'', G/A/L ''mnie'', D ''mnie'' (clitic ''mi''), I ''mną'' *2nd person singular familiar N ''ty'', G/A ''ciebie'' (clitic ''cię''), D ''tobie'' (clitic ''ci''), I ''tobą'', L ''tobie'' *3rd person singular masculine N ''on'', G/A ''jego/niego'' (clitic ''go''), D ''jemu/niemu'' (clitic ''mu''), I/L ''nim'' *3rd person singular feminine N ''ona'', G/D ''jej/niej'', A ''ją/nią'', I ''nią'', L ''niej'' *3rd person singular neuter N ''ono'', A ''je/nie'', other cases as masculine *1st person plural N ''my'', G/A/L ''nas'', D ''nam'', I ''nami'' *2nd person plural familiar N ''wy'', G/A/L ''was'', D ''wam'', I ''wami'' *3rd person plural masculine personal N ''oni'', G/A ''ich/nich'', D ''im/nim'', I ''nimi'', L ''nich'' *3rd person plural other N ''one'', A ''je/nie'', other cases as for masculine personal Polite 2nd person forms: ''pan'' (plural ''panowie'') and ''pani'' (plural ''panie'') are declined like those nouns. The mixed-sex form ''państwo'' (which can also be used as a noun to refer to a mixed-sex group or couple) is masculine personal plural, but declines like the neuter noun ''państwo'' ("state, country") except that the accusative is ''państwa'' (like the genitive) and the locative ''państwu''.


Reflexive pronouns

The declension of ''się is shown below. The form "siebie" is used when the pronouns is disconnected from the verb.''


Possessive pronouns

Possessive pronouns such as ''mój'', ''twój'', ''nasz'', ''wasz'' are declined like adjectives (''moja'', ''moje'' etc.), as are ''swój'' and ''pański''. The third-person forms ''jego'', ''jej'' and ''ich'' are invariant, as are other forms identical to genitives (''pana'' etc.)


Demonstrative pronouns

The demonstrative pronouns ten (this) and tamten (that) are declined in a manner similar to adjectives. Their declensions are shown below. * Tego/Tamtego are used for the Masculine Animate declension and Ten/Tamten are used for the Masculine inanimate declension. ** tą is only used in informal speech, tę is the standard written form.


Interrogative pronouns

''The declensions of "kto" and "co" are shown below.'' Derived pronouns such as ''ktoś/coś'', ''ktokolwiek/cokolwiek'', and ''nikt/nic'' are declined similarly to kto and co, however ''nic'' has the unaltered (accusative) form instead of ''niczego'' when it is the object of a negated verb.


Numbers and quantifiers

The declension of numerals is given below (accusative and vocative are equal to nominative unless stated). For information on formation and usage, see ''Numbers and quantifiers'' in the article on Polish grammar. *1 ''jeden'' like an adjective (feminine ''jedna'' etc., but neuter N/A ''jedno''). The plural forms also exist (''jedni/jedne'' etc.); they are used to mean "some", or to mean "one" with
pluralia tantum A ''plurale tantum'' (Latin for "plural only"; ) is a noun that appears only in the plural form and does not have a singular variant for referring to a single object. In a less strict usage of the term, it can also refer to nouns whose singular fo ...
(''jedne drzwi'' "one door"). *2 ''dwa'' (feminine N/A ''dwie'', masc. personal N ''dwaj/dwóch'' A ''dwu/dwóch''), G/L ''dwóch'', D ''dwóm'', I ''dwoma'' (fem. also ''dwiema'') *3 ''trzy'' (masc. personal N ''trzej/trzech'' A ''trzech''), G/L ''trzech'', D ''trzem'', I ''trzema'' *4 ''cztery'' (masc. personal N ''czterej/czterech'' A ''czterech''), G/L ''czterech'', D ''czterem'', I ''czterema'' *5 ''pięć'' (masc. personal N/A ''pięciu''), G/D/L ''pięciu'', I ''pięcioma'' *The same pattern as 5 is followed for the higher numbers ''sześć'', ''siedem'' (''siedmiu'' etc.), ''osiem'' (''ośmiu'' etc.), ''dziewięć'', ''dziesięć''; ''jedenaście'' (''jedenastu'') etc.; ''dwadzieścia'' (''dwudziestu'' etc.), ''trzydzieści'' (''trzydziestu''), ''czterdzieści'' (''-stu''), ''pięćdziesiąt'' (''pięćdziesięciu'') etc.; ''sto'' (''stu'' etc.), ''dwieście'' (''dwustu'' etc.), ''trzysta'' (''trzystu'' etc.), ''czterysta'' (''-stu''); ''pięćset'' (''pięciuset'') etc. From 500 onwards (and optionally for the lower hundreds) the instrumental is the same as the G/D/L form. Higher numbers (''tysiąc'', ''milion'' etc.) are declined as nouns, and their multiples are treated as number+noun combinations (''dwa tysiące'' "two thousand" behaves like ''dwa miesiące'' "two months", and so on). In compound numbers only the last part of the number is inflected, except when there are both tens and units, in which case both of those are inflected, and when ''jeden'', which is indeclinable in all compound numbers, is the last part of the number, in which case the second to last part is inflected. Collective numerals: *, G , D/L , I *, G , D/L , I *, G , D/L , I . Similarly for etc. Quantifiers: *, G/D/L and masc. personal N/A , I . Similarly , (), (, ), , * are invariant (so not often used in oblique cases if the meaning would be unclear) *forms like behave like 15, 50, 500 *''oba'' ("both") behaves like ''dwa'' (including feminine ''obie'', masculine personal ''obaj/obu'', collective ''oboje'', etc.), but usually with ''obu'' where ''dwa'' has ''dwóch''. The other word for "both", ''obydwa'', inflects like ''dwa''.


Verbs

The
lemma Lemma may refer to: Language and linguistics * Lemma (morphology), the canonical, dictionary or citation form of a word * Lemma (psycholinguistics), a mental abstraction of a word about to be uttered Science and mathematics * Lemma (botany), ...
of a verb is the
infinitive Infinitive ( abbreviated ) is a linguistics term for certain verb forms existing in many languages, most often used as non-finite verbs. As with many linguistic concepts, there is not a single definition applicable to all languages. The word is de ...
, which usually ends in ''-ć'' (occasionally ''-c''). Examples for infinitives in Polish include "by''ć", "czytać", and "brać".'' If a verb includes a prefix, then it is generally conjugated like the unprefixed verb, although sometimes the prefix may change its form (e.g. +: infinitive , but present tense etc.) The present tense (or future tense of perfective verbs) may follow either of the following patterns: *''Pattern 1: -m'' (1st person singular), ''-sz'' (2nd singular), ''-'' (3rd singular); ''-my'' (1st plural), ''-cie'' (2nd plural), ''-ją'' (3rd plural). This is followed by many verbs in ''-ać'', such as ''śpiewać'' ("sing"): ''śpiewam, śpiewasz, śpiewa'' etc. It is also followed by ''mieć'' ("have"): ''mam'' etc.; ''umieć'' ("know how to"; similarly ''rozumieć'' "understand"): ''umiem'' etc.; ''jeść'' ("eat", similarly with prefixes): ''jem'' etc., but 3P ''jedzą''; ''wiedzieć'' ("know", similarly with prefixes e.g. ''powiedzieć'' "say"): ''wiem'' etc. but ''wiedzą''; and ''dać'' ("give", similarly with prefixes): ''dam'' etc. but ''dadzą''. *''Pattern 2: -ę'' (1st singular); ''-ą'' (3rd plural); other forms with the same endings as above, but possibly with a different form of the stem than for 1S and 3P. For example: **''brać'' ("take"): **''kupić'' ("buy"): The future tense of ''być'' ("be") also follows the above pattern: ''będę, będziesz, będzie, ..., będą'' However the present tense of ''być'' is irregular: *''jestem, jesteś, jest; jesteśmy, jesteście, są'' The past tense of most verbs is formed by replacing the ''-ć'' of the infinitive with ''-ł'' for the masculine singular, ''-ła'' for feminine singular, ''-ło'' for neuter singular, ''-ły'' for feminine plural and ''-li'' for other plurals; then adding the endings for 1S, 2S, 3S, 1P, 2P, 3P. (The ''-e-'' in the singular suffixes appears after a consonant but not after a vowel.) For example, from ''być'': * 1S ''byłem/byłam'', 2S ''byłeś/byłaś'', 3S ''był/była/było'', 1P ''byliśmy/byłyśmy'', 2P ''byliście/byłyście'', 3P ''byli/były''. The personal past tense suffixes, which are reduced forms of the present tense of ''być'', are clitics and can be detached from the verb to attach to another accented word earlier in the sentence. Some verbs form their past stems differently: *Verbs in ''-eć'' have past tense in ''-ał(-)'' (the ''a'' alternates with ''e'', so the masculine personal plural is ''-eli(-)''). *Verbs in ''-ąć'' have an alternating vowel (''ę'' in place of ''ą'' when the following ''ł'' is followed by a vowel), although the alternation does not apply before ''-em'' and ''-eś'' (''zacząć'' "begin": ''zacząłem/zaczęłam'' etc.) The explanation for this is that ''ą'' shifts to ''ę'' only if it is the penultimate syllable of the verb, and in the original uncliticized verb ''zaczął, ą'' was part of the final syllable rather than the penultimate like in ''zaczęła.'' *Verbs in ''-c'' have a past stem ending with a consonant, related to the (1S/3P) present stem, e.g. ''móc'' "be able": 1S present ''mogę'', past stem ''móg-'' (with alternating vowel, this time even before ''-em'' and ''-eś'':, ''mogłem/mogłam,... , mógł/mogła/mogło'' etc.) *Some other verbs also follow the above pattern, i.e. with a stem ending in a consonant. (Note that the ''ł'' is not pronounced when final and preceded by a consonant.) This includes most verbs in ''-ść'' and ''-źć'', e.g. ''nieść'' ("carry"): ''niosłem...niósł...nieśli''. The verb ''iść'' ("go") has the irregular past stem forms ''szedł/szła/szło, szli/szły'' (similarly for its compounds: ''pójść'' has ''poszedł/poszła'' etc.). ''znaleźć'' and related verbs have forms like ''znalazł, znaleźli''. *Some verbs in ''-nąć'' drop that ending in some or all of their past stems, sometimes optionally. For example, ''zniknąć'' ("disappear") has ''znikł(a)'' as alternatives to ''zniknął/zniknęła''. The
conditional Conditional (if then) may refer to: *Causal conditional, if X then Y, where X is a cause of Y *Conditional probability, the probability of an event A given that another event B has occurred *Conditional proof, in logic: a proof that asserts a co ...
(or
subjunctive The subjunctive (also known as conjunctive in some languages) is a grammatical mood, a feature of the utterance that indicates the speaker's attitude towards it. Subjunctive forms of verbs are typically used to express various states of unreality s ...
) is formed from the past tense plus ''by'', the personal endings (if any) coming after the ''by''. For example: ''byłbym/byłabym'', ''byłbyś/byłabyś'', ''byłby/byłaby/byłoby''; ''bylibyśmy/byłybyśmy'', ''bylibyście/byłybyście'', ''byliby/byłyby''. The endings (''-by'', ''-bym'' etc.) are detachable clitics, like the past tense personal endings as mentioned above. The future tense of imperfective verbs (other than ''być'') is formed using the future of ''być'' (''będę'' etc.) together with the infinitive, or the past form (inflected for gender and number, but without any personal suffixes), of the verb in question. For example, the future of ''robić'' ("do, make") has such forms as ''będę robić/robił/robiła'', ''będzicie robić/robili/robiły''. The choice between infinitive and past form is usually a free one, but with modals governing another infinitive, the past form is used: ''będzie musiał odejść'' (not ''będzie musieć...'') "he will have to leave". The second personal singular imperative is formed from the present tense by dropping the ending (e.g. ''brać'': 2/3S present , imperative ), adding ''-ij'' for pronounceability (e.g. , pres. , imperative ); or (if the present tense is in ''-a-'') by adding ''-aj'' (e.g. , pres. , imperative ). Irregular examples include ''być: bądź'', ''mieć: miej''. Add ''-my'' and ''-cie'' for the 1P and 2P forms. To make third-person imperative sentences (including with the polite second-person pronouns ''pan'' etc.) the particle ''niech'' is used. Other forms of the verb are: *present
adverbial participle In linguistics, a participle () (from Latin ' a "sharing, partaking") is a nonfinite verb form that has some of the characteristics and functions of both verbs and adjectives. More narrowly, ''participle'' has been defined as "a word derived from ...
(imperfective verbs only), formed from the 3P present tense by adding ''-c'' (e.g. ''śpiewać: śpiewając''; ''być'' has ''będąc'') *present
adjectival participle In linguistics, a participle () (from Latin ' a "sharing, partaking") is a nonfinite verb form that has some of the characteristics and functions of both verbs and adjectives. More narrowly, ''participle'' has been defined as "a word derived from ...
(imperfective verbs only), formed from the present adverbial participle by adding adjectival endings (e.g. ''śpiewać: śpiewający'' etc.) *past active participle (perfective verbs only), formed from the past tense by replacing ''-ł'' with ''-wszy'' (or ''-łszy'' after a consonant), e.g. ''zabić: zabiwszy'' "having killed" (this form is invariant, i.e. it is an adverbial participle). *
passive participle In linguistics, a participle () (from Latin ' a "sharing, partaking") is a nonfinite verb form that has some of the characteristics and functions of both verbs and adjectives. More narrowly, ''participle'' has been defined as "a word derived from ...
(all transitive verbs), in ''-ny'' or ''-ty'' (conjugated as an adjective). The form used depends on the ending of the infinitive: ''-ać: -any''; ''-eć: -any'' but with vowel alternation (i.e. masc. personal pl. ''-eni''); ''-yć/-ić: -ony/-iony'' but with vowel alternation (''-eni''), or ''-yty/-ity'' in verbs with present tense in ''-yje/-ije'', like ''myć'' "wash" and ''bić'' "beat"; ''-ąć: -ęty'' (but ''-nąć: -nięty''). Verbs with past stem ending in a consonant form the participle from the (3S) present tense form, e.g. ''nieść'' "carry", pres. ''niosę,... niesie'', past ''niósł'', passive participle ''niesiony''. Note also ''jeść: jedzony''. *subjectless past tense, formed as the past participle but with the ending ''-o'' (e.g. ''śpiewano'' "there was sung") *
verbal noun A verbal noun or gerundial noun is a verb form that functions as a noun. An example of a verbal noun in English is 'sacking' as in the sentence "The sacking of the city was an epochal event" (''sacking'' is a noun formed from the verb ''sack''). ...
, also called
gerund In linguistics, a gerund ( abbreviated ) is any of various nonfinite verb forms in various languages; most often, but not exclusively, one that functions as a noun. In English, it has the properties of both verb and noun, such as being modifiab ...
, formed from the past participle with the ending ''-ie'', e.g. ''śpiewanie'' (note vowel alternation, e.g. ''rozumieć: rozumiany: rozumienie''). This is a neuter noun. The modal verb ''powinien'' ("should") is conjugated with adjective-type and personal endings similar to the past tense (''powinna/-o/-i/-y''; ''powinienem/powinnam'' "I should" etc.) It has only one tense, although on rare occasions, ''byłem'', ''byłeś'', ''był'', etc. is added to show past meaning.


Prepositions and prefixes

Before some consonant clusters, particularly clusters beginning with a sibilant (in the case of ''z'') or with ''f/w'' (in the case of ''w''), the prepositions ''z'' and ''w'' take the form ''ze'' and ''we'' (e.g. ''we Wrocławiu'' "in
Wrocław Wrocław (; german: Breslau, or . ; Silesian German: ''Brassel'') is a city in southwestern Poland and the largest city in the historical region of Silesia. It lies on the banks of the River Oder in the Silesian Lowlands of Central Europe, r ...
"). These forms are also used before the first-person singular pronouns in ''mn-''; several other prepositions also have longer forms before these pronouns (''przeze mnie, pode mną'' etc.), and these phrases are pronounced as single words, with the stress on the penultimate syllable (the ''-e''). When ''z'' is used as a prefix, it is spelt ''s-'' if it is part of a voiceless consonant cluster. As preposition it is spelt ''z'' even if pronounced ''s''. The
epenthesis In phonology, epenthesis (; Greek ) means the addition of one or more sounds to a word, especially in the beginning syllable ('' prothesis'') or in the ending syllable (''paragoge'') or in-between two syllabic sounds in a word. The word ''epent ...
of ''-e-'' also applies to the prefixes ''w-'' and ''z-/s-'', and to some others, such as ''roz-'' (''roz-'' + ''znać'' = ''rozeznać'').


Word formation

Polish makes wide use of
prefix A prefix is an affix which is placed before the stem of a word. Adding it to the beginning of one word changes it into another word. For example, when the prefix ''un-'' is added to the word ''happy'', it creates the word ''unhappy''. Particul ...
es and
suffix In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns, adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can carr ...
es in word formation. Some examples of this are: *Addition of prefixes to make
perfective The perfective aspect ( abbreviated ), sometimes called the aoristic aspect, is a grammatical aspect that describes an action viewed as a simple whole; i.e., a unit without interior composition. The perfective aspect is distinguished from the i ...
forms of verbs or to modify the meaning. The prefixes used for this purpose are mostly identical to prepositions (although they also include ''roz-'', and ''prze-'', the latter corresponding to the preposition ''przez''). The same prefixes are used for word formation with other parts of speech also. *Formation of verbs from nouns using the suffix ''-ować'' (as in ''kolorować'' "to colour" from ''kolor'' "colour"; ''organizować'' "to organize", cf. ''organizacja'' "organization"). *Formation of adjectives from nouns using suffixes such as ''-owy'', ''-ny'', ''-ski'' and ''-i'' (as in ''koci'' "cat's" from ''kot'' "cat"). *Formation of nouns from adjectives, usually using the suffix ''-ość'' (to form feminine nouns). *Formation of nouns from verbs, usually in ''-nie'', sometimes ''-cie'' (see the section on Verbs above). *Formation of nouns from other nouns or other stems, using such suffixes as ''-nik'', ''-nica'', ''-ec'', etc. (with various meanings). *Formation of
diminutive A diminutive is a root word that has been modified to convey a slighter degree of its root meaning, either to convey the smallness of the object or quality named, or to convey a sense of intimacy or endearment. A ( abbreviated ) is a word-form ...
forms of nouns, usually using the suffixes ''-ek/-ka/-ko'' (for the respective genders).


References


Further reading

*


External links


Polish Pronunciation Audio and Grammar Charts

‘Polszczyzna’ & the Revolutionary Feminine Suffix
{{Polish language Morphology