The joker in a card game, the knight in chess: if you’re looking for the most unpredictable of the six Russian cases, you’ll quickly land on the fourth. The accusative case (винительный падеж) may seem simple, but this Russian case often causes confusion – especially for beginners.
In this article, you’ll learn how the Russian accusative case (винительный падеж) works. We’ll start by looking at when it is used, and then move on to its declension and endings.
The accusative case has several functions in Russian. These are the most common and important uses.
The accusative case is used when an action is directed at someone or something. In a sentence, this is the direct object.
In I buy a magazine and I read the newspaper, magazine and newspaper are the direct object: they are being bought or read.
Verbs like to buy and to read are called transitive verbs: they take a direct object. The verb in such sentences (buy, read) is called transitive. Also check Transitive and Intransitive Verbs (Grammarly).
The accusative case is also used to indicate direction, especially movement toward a destination. It also appears in expressions of distance and time.
To Russia (Россия): в Россию.
To work (работа): на работу.
In a week (неделя): через неделю.
He looked through me: он смотрел сквозь меня.
The accusative often follows prepositions that indicate direction or movement, such as в and на (to), сквозь (through), and через (across).
With в and на, the prepositional case is also used when there is no movement (in, on). The accusative appears when answering the question куда? (where to?), and in fixed combinations like из … в (from … to) and с … на (from … to).
Some prepositions can take multiple cases. For example, по can be used with the dative or accusative, and за and под with both the accusative and instrumental. За + accusative is especially common, even when there is no clear sense of movement.
I (f.) am happy for you: я рада за вас.
Pay for the rent (аренда): платить за аренду.
Fight for the country (страна): бороться за страну.
Thanks for the vodka: спасибо за водку.
Also see
The accusative case is also used to say “on Monday,” “on Tuesday,” “on Wednesday,” and so on. This is done with the preposition в (and во before вторник). The case is only visible with days that end in -а: в среду, в пятницу, в субботу.
The accusative is also used to indicate weekdays without a preposition. Every Saturday: каждую субботу.
See Russian calendar words.
The accusative case follows many common verbs such as читать (to read), помнить (to remember), строить (to build), покупать (to buy), знать (know), готовить (to cook), слушать (to listen), изучать (to study), and любить (to love). These are all transitive verbs: they take a direct object.
With verbs of motion, the accusative (and sometimes the dative) is also used – a topic we’ll return to later.
The Russian accusative constantly makes distinctions. It treats masculine nouns differently from feminine ones, and people differently from things – with a small catch along the way.
The easiest part: neuter nouns stay the same, and masculine nouns usually do too.
Feminine nouns do change, but according to a simple rule:
-а → -у
-я → -ю
This also applies to adjectives.
Nouns ending in –ь (the soft sign) remain unchanged.
Masculine nouns do change when they refer to a living being. If a noun is animate (одушевлённое), the accusative follows the rules of the genitive. As a result, the accusative and genitive also share the same personal pronouns. Tamara even has a song about it (2019).
What counts as animate (or not) is a topic in itself. But in Russian, anyone who has ever been alive is never treated as a thing again: they remain grammatically animate. See Wanted Dead Or Alive: Noun Animacy in Russian (Russian Language Blog, 2015) en Кто? Что? Одушевленное и неодушевленное (Шишкина школа, 2014, 7 mins).
In the plural, the same principle applies:
inanimate → nominative form
animate → genitive form
This applies to all genders.
neuter → unchanged
masculine → usually unchanged, except for animate nouns
feminine → changes (-а/-я)
plural → depends on animacy
The same rules calmly explained again in Russian Cases – Nouns in the Accusative (Russian grammar, 2013, 4 mins). It follows Introduction to the Accusative (2013, 2 mins), in which we also learn that Борис любит Ольгу (Boris loves Olga) is the same as Ольгу любит Борис. The accusative has turned Ольга into Ольгу, indicating she is loved, and then the rest doesn’t matter anymore.
Adjectives in the Introduction to the Accusative: Adjectives (2020, 2 mins). Plural forms in Russian Cases – Accusative Plural (2013, 2 mins).
Get straight into practice with Accusative Case with Direct Object | Practice 1 (Amazing Russian, 2018, 9 mins). There’s also a Practice 2 (2020, 5 mins).
Preceded by and from the same channel, an Accusative Case: Introduction (2018, 11 mins), which also briefly touches on the freedom of word order that the accusative makes possible.
More declensions can be found in Винительный падеж. Существительные. Часть 1 (О русском по-русски, 2019, 17 mins). Also, see part 2 and Винительный падеж| Прилагательные (2020, 19 mins). Also, Винительный падеж. Окончания (Russian Language for Life and Work, 2018, 9 mins).
Below is an overview of the main endings of the Russian accusative case, for nouns and adjectives.
Accusative Case · Винительный падеж
Endings by gender, stem type, and animacy
| Stem | Animacy | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hard | Animate | -астудент → студента | -укнига → книгу | = Nom.окно → окно | = Gen. pl.студенты → студентов |
| Inanimate | = Nom.стол → стол | = Nom. pl.столы → столы | |||
| Soft | Animate | -ягений → гения | -юземля → землю | = Nom.море → море | = Gen. pl.гении → гениев |
| Inanimate | = Nom.гость → гость | = Nom. pl.гости → гости |
Key rule: Only masculine nouns distinguish animate vs. inanimate in the singular. Neuter always copies the nominative. Feminine nouns in -ь are unchanged (дверь → дверь). In the plural, animacy applies to all genders.
Endings by stem type, gender, and animacy
| Stem | Animacy | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hard | Animate | -огоновый → нового | -уюновая → новую | = Nom.новое → новое | -ыхновые → новых |
| Inanimate | = Nom.новый → новый | = Nom. pl.новые → новые | |||
| Soft | Animate | -егосиний → синего | -ююсиняя → синюю | = Nom.синее → синее | -ихсиние → синих |
| Inanimate | = Nom.синий → синий | = Nom. pl.синие → синие |
Spelling rule: After velars (г, к, х) and sibilants (ж, ш, щ, ч), hard animate adjectives use -ого / -ых. Inanimate masculine copies the nominative (большой, русский). Feminine accusative after sibilants: горячую (not горячюю).
The summary by Victoria Arysheva is useful, but goes fast. Perhaps a bit much for now for many, but worth revisiting. +1 for poetic example sentences like солнце зашло за тучу (the sun disappeared behind clouds) and сквозь туман и тучи самолёт летит вперёд (through fog and clouds, the plane flies on).
Useful recaps also in Винительный Падеж (2020) by русский с носителем …
… and in this two-minute overview by Yana Svet (2020).
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