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locative case and prepositions


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Rain33Threads: 15
Posts: 24
Joined: Jul 5, 11
 Jul 22, 11, 04:28    #1
I hate asking so many questions on this forum; my teacher once told me that asking too questions is a sign of rudeness, so I will refrain from asking any more.

Anyway, my question. Does anyone know what other prepositions take the locative case? I only know of two prepositions that take the locative case so far-- w and przy--but I keep thinking that there must be others. Can anyone list all the prepositions that take the locative case?

LlamaticThreads: 4
Posts: 605
Joined: May 26, 11
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 Jul 22, 11, 04:49    #2
Rain33:
I hate asking so many questions on this forum; my teacher once told me that asking too questions is a sign of rudeness, so I will refrain from asking any more.

Don't sweat it. I'm sure peeps don't mind helping you. That's what this place is for.
But I can't help you. Sorry. Lol...
BzibziohThreads: 6
Posts: 3,657
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 Jul 22, 11, 04:54    #3
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Polish/Locative_case
SzwedwPolsceThreads: 13
Posts: 1,915
Joined: Feb 21, 09
Edited by: SzwedwPolsce  Jul 22, 11, 13:56    #4
Bzibzioh's link lists the most common.

Remember that most prep that take locative, sometimes take accusative.

W/na/o are good examples of that.

When they really refer to a location they take locative. In most other situations they take accusative.

Movement to a place takes accusative.

Jestem w szpitalu. (locative)
Jadê do Warszawy w pi±tek. (accusative) because it is not a place or movemnt. It just specify WHEN something will happen.

Jestem na rynku. (locative)
Idziemy na rynek. (accusative - because it is a movement)
SzwedwPolsceThreads: 13
Posts: 1,915
Joined: Feb 21, 09
 Jul 22, 11, 14:08    #5
Polish must be learnt systematically. Which book do you use?
I would recommend that you focus on smaller amounts of grammar at the same time. And try to build it more step by step.
Rain33Threads: 15
Posts: 24
Joined: Jul 5, 11
 Jul 23, 11, 06:33    #6
Polish must be learnt systematically. Which book do you use?
I would recommend that you focus on smaller amounts of grammar at the same time. And try to build it more step by step.


I'm using three different grammar books: "Polish: an essential grammar" by Dana Bielec, "Teach yourself Polish" by M.Corbridge-Patkaniowska (1948 edition), and "Let's Learn Polish" by Zofia Bastgen (there is a section on grammar in the back of the book.)

Learning a language is so daunting--there's so much to learn and absorb, creating sentences on your own, pronunciation, conjugation, vocabulary, etc, etc.
Lyzko  Jul 23, 11, 14:50    #7
Rain, if I were you and learning Polish for the first time, I'd focus on the sounds of the language, i.e. dictations, to challenge your listening comp. skills. When you feel confident about hearing and eventually speaking Polish with native speakers, preferrably, the albeit brutal grammar will slowly begin to become real for you. Worrying too much though about cases and endings, aspects, counting quirks etc... at the beginning, might prove counterproductive in the long run-:)
SzwedwPolsceThreads: 13
Posts: 1,915
Joined: Feb 21, 09
 Jul 23, 11, 21:09    #8
"Polish: an essential grammar" by Dana Bielec

Many beginners think that this book can be confusing. It is too dense and detailed for many beginners. However, it is good to use it as a reference book.



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