Serbian Noun Gender (and Why There Are No Articles)
Two things surprise English speakers on day one. First, Serbian has no articles at all: no 'a', no 'the'. The bare word grad covers 'a city', 'the city', and just 'city' — context does the work. So stop hunting for a word that means 'the'; it doesn't exist. Second, every noun has a gender: masculine, feminine, or neuter. The ending is your best clue: a consonant usually means masculine (grad), -a means feminine (žena), and -o or -e mean neuter (selo, more). Treat that as a strong guess, not a law — noć (night) ends in a consonant but is feminine, and tata (dad) ends in -a but is masculine. Gender matters because it spreads: veliki grad but velika žena. Learn each noun with its gender from the start.
Examples
- grad city
- žena woman
- selo village
- noć night
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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Serbian has no word for 'the' and no word for 'a'. But every single noun is secretly hiding a gender — and getting it right changes everything.
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Let's start with the easy half. Serbian has no articles at all. The word 'grad' can mean 'a city', 'the city', or just 'city' — context does the work English does with little words.
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So stop hunting for 'the'. The harder half is gender. Every noun is masculine, feminine, or neuter — and gender controls how adjectives, pronouns, and past-tense verbs agree with it.
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The good news: you can usually tell the gender from the ending. A consonant at the end means masculine. An -a means feminine. An -o or -e means neuter. Look at the last letter and you've got a strong first guess.
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Take the word for city. It ends in a consonant, so it's masculine. grad
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The word for woman ends in -a, so it's feminine. The ending tells you immediately. žena
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And the word for village ends in -o, so it's neuter. selo
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Nouns ending in -e are neuter too. The word for sea is a clean example. more
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Now the trap. Don't assume gender follows meaning, and don't fully trust the ending. The word for night ends in a consonant — so you'd guess masculine — but it's actually feminine. noć
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It goes the other way too. The word for dad ends in -a, which screams feminine — but of course dad is masculine. Meaning wins over the ending here. tata
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Why does any of this matter? Because gender spreads. An adjective has to match its noun. 'Big city' and 'big woman' use different forms of the same word 'big'.
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So, two things to lock in. There are no articles — drop 'the' and 'a' completely. And learn each noun with its gender, using the ending as your first clue.