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Sanatan Dharma

सनातन धर्म — Hindu Scripture Knowledge Base

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)

#NameRoleQuestion
1PrathamaSubjectWho / What?
2DvitiyaObject (direct)Whom / What?
3TritiyaInstrument / ByBy / With what?
4ChaturthiRecipient / ForFor whom?
5PanchamiAblative / FromFrom where / whom?
6ShashthiPossessive / OfWhose?
7SaptamiLocative / In, On, AtWhere / When?
8SambodhanaVocative / AddressingO! 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)

EkavachanaSingular
One
DvivachanaDual
Exactly two
BahuvachanaPlural
More than two