< Gothic < 2 
 
  
        
      Hails!
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
- Chapter Vocabulary
 - Adjectives
 - Adverbs
 - Numbers
 - Exercises
 
Chapter Four
- Chapter Vocabulary
 - Word Order
 - Strong verbs
 - Comparatives
 - Conjunctions
 - Neologisms
 - Exercises
 
Chapter Five
- Chapter Vocabulary
 - Gothic-to-English Translation Exercises
 - English-to-Gothic Translation Exercises
 - Neologism Exercises
 
Appendix
- Further Resources
 - Gothic Glossary
 - Answers to Exercises
 
What is a Case?
In the simplest terms, a case determines the function of a word in a sentence. Gothic has five cases: the nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, and vocative.
- The Nominative Case indicates the subject of a sentence. Generally, the noun "that is doing something" is in the nominative. Example: The man went to the store.
 - The Genitive Case indicates an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun, or in simpler terms, the genitive case indicates to whom an object belongs. Example: This is the man's store.
 - The Dative Case indicates the indirect object of a sentence. Example: The man gave the money to the storekeeper.
 - The Accusative Case indicates the direct object of a sentence or transitive verb. Example: The man bought food.
 - The Vocative Case is used when you directly talk to someone, for example: "My brother, listen to me!" or "My friend, go with me".
 
Certain Gothic verbs, pronouns, and adjectives must modify a case.
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