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Level 2
Vibhakti — The 8 Cases
How Sanskrit nouns change based on their role in a sentence
- Sanskrit uses a case system called Vibhakti to show the role of a noun in a sentence.
- There are 8 cases (Vibhakti), each indicating a different grammatical relationship.
- The same noun changes its ending depending on which case it is in.
- Understanding Vibhakti is essential for reading any Sanskrit text.
- Cases also vary by gender (Linga): Masculine (Pum), Feminine (Stri), Neuter (Napumsaka).
- And by number (Vachana): Singular (Ekavachana), Dual (Dvivachana), Plural (Bahuvachana).
The 8 Cases (Vibhakti)
| # | Name | Role | Question |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Prathama | Subject | Who / What? |
| 2 | Dvitiya | Object (direct) | Whom / What? |
| 3 | Tritiya | Instrument / By | By / With what? |
| 4 | Chaturthi | Recipient / For | For whom? |
| 5 | Panchami | Ablative / From | From where / whom? |
| 6 | Shashthi | Possessive / Of | Whose? |
| 7 | Saptami | Locative / In, On, At | Where / When? |
| 8 | Sambodhana | Vocative / Addressing | O! Hey! |
Gender (Linga)
Pullinga (Masculine)
e.g. deva, nara, rāma
Strilinga (Feminine)
e.g. devī, nadī, sītā
Napuṃsakalinga (Neuter)
e.g. phala, jñāna, karma
Number (Vachana)
Ekavachana — Singular
One
Dvivachana — Dual
Exactly two
Bahuvachana — Plural
More than two