Ukrainian Seven Cases: Complete Declension Reference

All 7 Ukrainian cases explained: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, locative, vocative. Full declension tables and key differences from Russian.

Ukrainian Seven Cases: Complete Declension Reference

Ukrainian is a case-marked language, which means that nouns, pronouns, adjectives, numerals, and participles change their endings to signal their grammatical function in a sentence. Where English relies heavily on word order and prepositions, Ukrainian relies on case endings. A Ukrainian sentence can be reordered with relative freedom because the case endings carry the grammatical information that word order carries in English. This flexibility is one of the language's great expressive resources, but it also means that mastering the case system is the central grammatical task for any learner.

Ukrainian has seven cases: nominative (називний), genitive (родовий), dative (давальний), accusative (знахідний), instrumental (орудний), locative (місцевий), and vocative (кличний). Russian has six of these cases but has lost the vocative as a living paradigm, retaining it only in a handful of archaic or ecclesiastical forms (Боже, Господи) and colloquial truncations (мам, пап). Ukrainian keeps the vocative as a fully productive case that is used in everyday speech whenever a person is addressed. The presence of the vocative is one of the clearest structural markers that separates Ukrainian from Russian.

Every Ukrainian noun belongs to a declension class defined by gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and stem type (hard, soft, mixed). Each declension class has its own set of case endings, and most classes additionally show stem alternations that reflect centuries of phonological history. In this reference, we walk through the seven cases, give their principal functions, and present complete declension tables for the most common noun patterns.


The Seven Cases: Overview

Table 1: Ukrainian case functions

Case Ukrainian name Principal question Primary function
Nominative називний хто? що? subject of the sentence
Genitive родовий кого? чого? possession, absence, after certain prepositions
Dative давальний кому? чому? indirect object, recipient
Accusative знахідний кого? що? direct object, target of motion
Instrumental орудний ким? чим? means, instrument, accompaniment
Locative місцевий на кому? на чому? location (always with preposition)
Vocative кличний - direct address

The locative is the only case that cannot appear without a preposition. Nominative and vocative typically appear without prepositions. The others may or may not take prepositions depending on meaning.


Nominative: The Subject Case

The nominative is the citation form - the form you find in a dictionary. Its primary function is to mark the grammatical subject of a finite clause. It also marks predicate nominals after the copula бути (to be) when the copula is explicit (бути + nominative instrumental is complex; see below).

Examples:

  • Книга лежить на столі. (Knyha lezhyt na stoli.) = The book is lying on the table.
  • Мій брат - лікар. (Miy brat - likar.) = My brother is a doctor. (Predicate nominative.)
  • Україна - велика країна. (Ukraina - velyka krayina.) = Ukraine is a big country.

Genitive: Possession, Absence, Partitive

The genitive has more uses than any other Ukrainian case. It marks possession (the book of the student), absence (there is no bread), partitive quantity (a glass of water), the object of many prepositions (без, для, від, до, з, у/в meaning "at/of," etc.), and the direct object of a negated verb in many contexts. Numbers 5 and above trigger genitive plural on the counted noun; this is a central rule of Ukrainian number agreement.

Examples:

  • Книга студента (Knyha studenta) = the student's book
  • Немає хліба. (Nemaye khliba.) = There is no bread.
  • Склянка води (Sklianka vody) = a glass of water
  • Я не читаю цієї книги. (Ya ne chytaiu tsiyeyi knyhy.) = I do not read this book.
  • Я з України. (Ya z Ukrainy.) = I am from Ukraine.

Dative: Recipient, Indirect Object

The dative marks the indirect object (the recipient of a gift, the addressee of a message) and the experiencer in certain impersonal constructions (it is cold to me = мені холодно). It follows a handful of prepositions, most notably завдяки (thanks to), всупереч (contrary to), and назустріч (toward).

Examples:

  • Я даю книгу другові. (Ya daiu knyhu druhovi.) = I give a book to the friend.
  • Мамі подобається музика. (Mami podobayetsia muzyka.) = Mother likes music. (Literally: to mother is pleasing music.)
  • Мені холодно. (Meni kholodno.) = I am cold.

Accusative: Direct Object, Motion Target

The accusative marks the direct object of a transitive verb and the target of directional motion after prepositions like у/в, на, за, через, про. For inanimate masculine nouns, the accusative is identical to the nominative. For animate masculine nouns, the accusative is identical to the genitive - a rule known as animacy. Feminine and neuter nouns have their own dedicated accusative endings.

Examples:

  • Я читаю книгу. (Ya chytaiu knyhu.) = I read a book.
  • Я бачу брата. (Ya bachu brata.) = I see my brother. (Animate masculine = genitive form)
  • Я їду в Київ. (Ya yidu v Kyiv.) = I am going to Kyiv. (Inanimate masculine = nominative form)
  • Я думаю про тебе. (Ya dumaiu pro tebe.) = I am thinking about you.

Instrumental: Means, Accompaniment, Predicate

The instrumental marks the instrument or means by which an action is performed (to write with a pen = писати ручкою), accompaniment when used with з (to speak with a friend = говорити з другом), and the predicate noun when the copula бути is in the past or future tense. It also appears in several time and manner expressions (вечорами = in the evenings; потягом = by train).

Examples:

  • Я пишу ручкою. (Ya pyshu ruchkoiu.) = I write with a pen.
  • Я говорю з братом. (Ya hovoriu z bratom.) = I speak with my brother.
  • Він був лікарем. (Vin buv likarem.) = He was a doctor. (Past copula + instrumental)
  • Я їжджу потягом. (Ya yizhdzhu potiahom.) = I travel by train.

Locative: Location

The locative never appears without a preposition. The main prepositions that govern the locative are у/в (in), на (on, at), при (at, by), по (along, around, over). The ending is often -і or -у/-ю for masculines, -і for feminines, -і or -ю for neuters, with complex alternations in the stem. Historically this case was called "prepositional" in Russian; Ukrainian tradition calls it "locative."

Examples:

  • Книга в столі. (Knyha v stoli.) = The book is in the table. (Wait - usually на столі: on the table.)
  • Книга на столі. (Knyha na stoli.) = The book is on the table.
  • Ми в Україні. (My v Ukrayini.) = We are in Ukraine.
  • Я думаю про неї. (Ya dumaiu pro neyi.) = I am thinking about her. (про takes accusative, not locative)

Vocative: Direct Address (Unique to Ukrainian)

The vocative is the case of direct address. It is used when you call someone by name or title. Ukrainian uses it in every formal, informal, and emotional address. Russian has lost this case in modern usage; Ukrainian retains it fully.

Table 2: Vocative formation

Nominative Vocative Meaning
мама мамо mom
тато тату dad
брат брате brother
сестра сестро sister
друг друже friend
пан пане sir
пані пані madam (same form)
Микола Миколо Mykola
Марія Маріє Mariya
Ольга Ольго Olha
Іван Іване Ivan
Україна Україно Ukraine

Examples:

  • Мамо, я вдома! (Mamo, ya vdoma!) = Mom, I am home!
  • Друже, допоможи! (Druzhe, dopomozhy!) = Friend, help!
  • Пане вчителю, можна запитати? (Pane vchyteliu, mozhna zapytaty?) = Mr Teacher, may I ask?
  • Славо Україні! (Slavo Ukraini!) = This is actually Слава Україні with nominative Слава + dative Україні: "glory to Ukraine."
  • Ольго, як справи? (Olho, yak spravy?) = Olha, how are things?

Using the nominative instead of the vocative in direct address is a distinctively Russophone feature in Ukrainian speech. Native speakers notice it immediately and perceive it as either a grammatical error or a political marker.


Declension of Masculine Hard-Stem Nouns (стіл, "table")

Table 3: Masculine hard-stem declension - стіл (table)

Case Singular Plural
Nominative стіл столи
Genitive стола столів
Dative столу / столові столам
Accusative стіл столи
Instrumental столом столами
Locative (на) столі (на) столах
Vocative столе столи

Note the alternation: in the nominative singular there is the vowel о in an open syllable; in the other cases, when the syllable closes, the о becomes і. This ikavism (о > і in closed syllables) is one of the most characteristic phonological patterns of Ukrainian and appears across many word classes.


Declension of Feminine Hard-Stem Nouns (книга, "book")

Table 4: Feminine hard-stem declension - книга (book)

Case Singular Plural
Nominative книга книги
Genitive книги книг
Dative книзі книгам
Accusative книгу книги
Instrumental книгою книгами
Locative (на) книзі (на) книгах
Vocative книго книги

In the dative and locative singular, the stem-final г palatalizes to з (книзі, not *книгі). Similar alternations apply: к > ц, х > с.


Declension of Neuter Hard-Stem Nouns (вікно, "window")

Table 5: Neuter hard-stem declension - вікно (window)

Case Singular Plural
Nominative вікно вікна
Genitive вікна вікон
Dative вікну вікнам
Accusative вікно вікна
Instrumental вікном вікнами
Locative (у) вікні (у) вікнах
Vocative вікно вікна

The genitive plural typically has no ending (zero ending) with an inserted о or е to break consonant clusters: вікна > вікон.


Common Mistakes (especially for Russian speakers learning Ukrainian)

1. Using the nominative in direct address. Russians say "Мама, я дома." Ukrainian requires the vocative: "Мамо, я вдома." The vocative is living and mandatory.

2. Confusing the locative ending. Russian prepositional singular of masculine nouns often ends in -е (в столе). Ukrainian locative ends in -і (на столі). Do not copy the Russian ending.

3. Missing the ikavism (о > і in closed syllables). Ukrainian стіл (table, nominative) becomes стола (genitive) because the syllable opens. Russian has стол / стола with no such alternation.

4. Using Russian genitive plural endings. Russian often uses -ов or -ей; Ukrainian hard-stem masculines take -ів (столів), and feminine/neuter often take a zero ending (книг, вікон).

5. Copying Russian preposition choices. "To go to Kyiv" in Ukrainian is їхати в Київ or до Києва. The preposition до with genitive is very common for directional meaning, whereas Russian prefers в with accusative.

6. Forgetting animacy in the masculine accusative. Animate masculines take the genitive form in the accusative: Я бачу брата (I see my brother). Inanimate masculines keep the nominative form: Я бачу стіл.

7. Dative forms for nouns. Ukrainian masculines often have two dative forms: -ові / -еві or -у / -ю (братові / брату). Both are acceptable; -ові is more characteristically Ukrainian.

8. Instrumental feminine ending. Ukrainian is -ою / -ею (книгою, землею). Russian is -ой / -ей (книгой, землей). Different sounds.

9. Omitting the soft sign in instrumental plural. It is столами, not *столамы. Ukrainian has no ы; instrumental plural is -ами / -ями.

10. Confusing locative with instrumental after prepositions. The preposition з means "from" with genitive and "with" with instrumental. Do not confuse.


Quick Reference

Table 6: Case cheat sheet

Case When to use Key question
Nominative Subject хто? що?
Genitive Of, from, without, after numbers 5+, negated object кого? чого?
Dative To, for (recipient) кому? чому?
Accusative Direct object, "to" (motion) кого? що?
Instrumental With (means/company), past copula ким? чим?
Locative In, on, at (always with preposition) на кому? на чому?
Vocative Direct address (Name, friend!)

Table 7: Preposition to case mapping

Preposition Case Meaning
без genitive without
для genitive for
від genitive from
до genitive to, toward
з (= from) genitive out of, from
завдяки dative thanks to
у/в + accusative accusative into (motion)
на + accusative accusative onto
про accusative about
з (= with) instrumental with (company)
над, під, перед, за instrumental over, under, before, behind
у/в + locative locative in, inside
на + locative locative on, at
при locative at, by

FAQ

Why does Ukrainian have seven cases when Russian has six?

Ukrainian preserves the vocative as a living, productive case, while Russian has lost it in modern usage (retaining only a few archaic forms like Боже, Господи). Historical East Slavic had the vocative; Ukrainian kept it, Russian innovated it away.

Is the vocative really used in everyday speech?

Yes. Whenever you call someone by name or address them by title, you use the vocative. "Mariyo, sidai!" (Mariya, sit down!) uses the vocative Mariyo, not the nominative Mariya. Skipping it marks a speaker as non-native or Russified.

What is the ikavism and how does it affect declension?

Ikavism is the historical sound change o/e > i in closed syllables. It means that many Ukrainian nouns alternate their stem vowel between cases: нога > ніг, стіл > стола, кінь > коня. This is one of the most distinctive Ukrainian phonological features and has to be learned stem by stem.

What is the difference between genitive and accusative for masculine nouns?

For inanimate masculine nouns, the accusative equals the nominative (стіл). For animate masculine nouns, the accusative equals the genitive (брата). This "animacy" rule applies to people and animals.

Which case does negation trigger?

A negated transitive verb traditionally takes the genitive for its object (Я не читаю книги = I do not read a book). In modern spoken Ukrainian, the accusative is also common (Я не читаю книгу), but the genitive is more formal and preserved in careful writing.

Are there any case-less Ukrainian nouns?

A handful of recent loanwords (кіно, пальто, таксі, кафе) do not decline. They keep the same form in all cases. Also, proper names of non-Slavic origin sometimes resist declension.

How long does it take to master Ukrainian cases?

Active use of all seven cases in fluent speech typically takes 1-2 years of regular study. Recognition - understanding what case a noun is in and why - can be achieved in 3-6 months. Cases are not learned by memorizing tables but by extensive reading and listening that internalizes the patterns.


See Also

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does Ukrainian have seven cases when Russian has six?

Ukrainian preserves the vocative as a living, productive case, while Russian has lost it in modern usage. Historical East Slavic had the vocative; Ukrainian kept it, Russian innovated it away.

Is the vocative really used in everyday speech?

Yes. Whenever you call someone by name or address them by title, you use the vocative. 'Mariyo, sidai!' (Mariya, sit down!) uses the vocative Mariyo, not the nominative Mariya.

What is the ikavism and how does it affect declension?

Ikavism is the historical sound change o/e > i in closed syllables. It means many Ukrainian nouns alternate their stem vowel between cases: нога > ніг, стіл > стола, кінь > коня.

What is the difference between genitive and accusative for masculine nouns?

For inanimate masculine nouns, the accusative equals the nominative (стіл). For animate masculine nouns, the accusative equals the genitive (брата). This animacy rule applies to people and animals.

Which case does negation trigger?

A negated transitive verb traditionally takes the genitive for its object (Я не читаю книги). In modern spoken Ukrainian, the accusative is also common, but the genitive is more formal and preserved in careful writing.

Are there any case-less Ukrainian nouns?

A handful of recent loanwords (кіно, пальто, таксі, кафе) do not decline. They keep the same form in all cases. Also, proper names of non-Slavic origin sometimes resist declension.

How long does it take to master Ukrainian cases?

Active use of all seven cases in fluent speech typically takes 1-2 years of regular study. Recognition can be achieved in 3-6 months. Cases are internalized through extensive reading and listening, not just memorizing tables.