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BeginnerGrammatical Case
How Spanish, English and Chinese mark the grammatical role of nouns and pronouns through case.
Compare languages
Grammatical case indicates the syntactic function of a noun or pronoun in a sentence. Spanish retains case for personal pronouns. English has almost entirely lost case marking, retaining only pronoun forms. Chinese has no case system at all; word order and particles express grammatical roles.
Overview
Grammatical case is a system where the form of a noun or pronoun changes depending on its grammatical function in the sentence.
- Spanish: Retains a robust case system for personal pronouns, distinguishing nominative, accusative, dative, and prepositional forms. Nouns have no case marking.
- English: Has almost entirely lost case. Only personal pronouns retain distinct forms (I/me, he/him, she/her, we/us, they/them). The Saxon genitive (‘s) is the only noun case remnant.
- Chinese: Has no case system whatsoever. Grammatical roles are indicated entirely by word order and preposition-like particles.
Spanish
Spanish pronouns maintain a clear case distinction:
| Function | Form | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Subject (nominative) | yo, tú, él, ella, nosotros, vosotros, ellos | Yo canto (I sing) |
| Direct object (accusative) | me, te, lo/la, nos, os, los/las | Me vio (He saw me) |
| Indirect object (dative) | me, te, le, nos, os, les | Le di el libro (I gave him the book) |
| After preposition | mí, ti, él, ella | Para mí (For me) |
| Possessive | mío, tuyo, suyo, nuestro | Es mío (It’s mine) |
Clitic doubling: Spanish often doubles the indirect object pronoun: Le di el libro a María (I gave the book to María).
English
English has minimal case marking:
- Pronouns: I/me, he/him, she/her, we/us, they/them, who/whom
- Nouns: Only the genitive ‘s (the boy’s book)
- No dative/accusative distinction: “I gave him the book” — him is both dative and accusative
Whom is dying: Most native speakers now use “who” in all positions, even as an object.
Chinese
Chinese expresses grammatical roles through word order and particles:
- Subject: First position in the sentence
- Object: After the verb
- Possession: Possessor + 的 + possessed
- Recipient: 给 + recipient (functionally equivalent to dative)
- 我给了他一本书。(I gave him a book.)
- 这是我的书。(This is my book.)
- 他从北京来。(He comes from Beijing.)
Chinese has no morphological case at all. Every noun and pronoun keeps the same form regardless of its grammatical function.
Key differences
| Feature | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pronoun case | Extensive | Minimal (6 pairs) | None |
| Noun case | None | Genitive ‘s only | None |
| Dative/accusative distinction | Yes | No (merged) | N/A |
| Prepositional case | Yes (mí vs yo) | No | N/A |
| Expression of roles | Pronoun form + word order | Mostly word order | Word order + particles |
Examples
Nominative (subject)
yo, tú, él, ella
Accusative (direct object)
me, te, lo/la, nos, os, los/las
Dative (indirect object)
me, te, le, nos, os, les
Prepositional object
mí, ti (yo → mí after preposition)
Possessive (genitive)
mi, tu, su, nuestro
Case on nouns
None (except fossilized forms like a + el = al)
Examples
Nominative (subject)
I, you, he, she
Accusative (direct object)
me, you, him, her, us, them
Dative (indirect object)
me, you, him, her, us, them (same as accusative)
Prepositional object
me, you, him (same forms)
Possessive (genitive)
my, your, his, her, our
Case on nouns
None (only 's genitive)
Examples
Nominative (subject)
我, 你, 他, 她 (no change)
Accusative (direct object)
我, 你, 他, 她 (no change)
Dative (indirect object)
给他/她 (preposition-like 给)
Prepositional object
我, 你, 他 (no change)
Possessive (genitive)
我的, 你的, 他的 (particle 的)
Case on nouns
None
Comparison at a glance
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative (subject) | yo, tú, él, ella | I, you, he, she | 我, 你, 他, 她 (no change) |
| Accusative (direct object) | me, te, lo/la, nos, os, los/las | me, you, him, her, us, them | 我, 你, 他, 她 (no change) |
| Dative (indirect object) | me, te, le, nos, os, les | me, you, him, her, us, them (same as accusative) | 给他/她 (preposition-like 给) |
| Prepositional object | mí, ti (yo → mí after preposition) | me, you, him (same forms) | 我, 你, 他 (no change) |
| Possessive (genitive) | mi, tu, su, nuestro | my, your, his, her, our | 我的, 你的, 他的 (particle 的) |
| Case on nouns | None (except fossilized forms like a + el = al) | None (only 's genitive) | None |
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Side-by-side comparison
| Grammar concepts | Spanish | English | Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative (subject) | yo, tú, él, ella | I, you, he, she | 我, 你, 他, 她 (no change) |
| Accusative (direct object) | me, te, lo/la, nos, os, los/las | me, you, him, her, us, them | 我, 你, 他, 她 (no change) |
| Dative (indirect object) | me, te, le, nos, os, les | me, you, him, her, us, them (same as accusative) | 给他/她 (preposition-like 给) |
| Prepositional object | mí, ti (yo → mí after preposition) | me, you, him (same forms) | 我, 你, 他 (no change) |
| Possessive (genitive) | mi, tu, su, nuestro | my, your, his, her, our | 我的, 你的, 他的 (particle 的) |
| Case on nouns | None (except fossilized forms like a + el = al) | None (only 's genitive) | None |
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Examples in context
Nominative (subject)
Spanish
yo, tú, él, ella
English
I, you, he, she
Chinese
我, 你, 他, 她 (no change)
Accusative (direct object)
Spanish
me, te, lo/la, nos, os, los/las
English
me, you, him, her, us, them
Chinese
我, 你, 他, 她 (no change)
Dative (indirect object)
Spanish
me, te, le, nos, os, les
English
me, you, him, her, us, them (same as accusative)
Chinese
给他/她 (preposition-like 给)
Prepositional object
Spanish
mí, ti (yo → mí after preposition)
English
me, you, him (same forms)
Chinese
我, 你, 他 (no change)
Possessive (genitive)
Spanish
mi, tu, su, nuestro
English
my, your, his, her, our
Chinese
我的, 你的, 他的 (particle 的)
Case on nouns
Spanish
None (except fossilized forms like a + el = al)
English
None (only 's genitive)
Chinese
None
Select at least one language to view comparisons
Key Takeaways
Spanish: Retains a robust case system for personal pronouns, distinguishing nominative, accusative, dative, and prepositional forms. Nouns have no ca...
English: Has almost entirely lost case. Only personal pronouns retain distinct forms (I/me, he/him, she/her, we/us, they/them). The Saxon genitive ('...
Chinese: Has no case system whatsoever. Grammatical roles are indicated entirely by word order and preposition-like particles.
Key concepts compared: Nominative (subject), Accusative (direct object), Dative (indirect object).
Last updated: June 4, 2026