Questions & Answers about Vidimo se sutra u školi.
Vidimo = “we see” (1st person plural present of vidjeti, “to see”).
se is a reflexive/reciprocal clitic meaning “each other.”
So Vidimo se literally means “We see each other,” which is the normal way to say “See you.” Adding sutra (“tomorrow”) and u školi (“at school”) gives “See you tomorrow at school.”
se marks a reciprocal action (“each other”) and is an unstressed clitic that must stand in second position in the clause. Examples:
- Vidimo se sutra u školi.
- Sutra se vidimo u školi.
- U školi se vidimo sutra.
It cannot be the first word of the clause. You’ll often hear Vidimo se as a fixed farewell.
Because after u:
- Use the locative case for location: u školi = “in/at school.”
- Use the accusative case for motion into: u školu = “to (into) the school.”
So “See you tomorrow at school” needs the locative: u školi.
Relevant singular forms:
- Nominative: škola (school)
- Genitive: škole (of the school)
- Dative: školi (to/for the school)
- Accusative: školu (object / motion into)
- Locative: školi (in/at the school) ← used here after u
- Instrumental: školom (with/by the school)
Yes. Croatian word order is flexible. All of these are fine and mean the same thing; the differences are in emphasis:
- Vidimo se sutra u školi. (neutral)
- Sutra se vidimo u školi. (emphasizes the time)
- Vidimo se u školi sutra. (slight emphasis on place)
Both are correct and natural:
- Vidimo se sutra uses the present to express a planned future meeting (very idiomatic, like English “See you tomorrow”).
- Vidjet ćemo se sutra is the explicit future (“We will see each other tomorrow”), slightly more formal or explicit, but the meaning is practically the same here.
No. Without se, the verb needs a direct object:
- Vidimo te/vas sutra (u školi). = “We’ll see you tomorrow (at school).”
To say “See you,” keep the reciprocal: Vidimo se.
- Vidimo se: approximately “VEE-dee-mo seh” (note se is unstressed).
- sutra: “SOO-trah.”
- u školi: “oo SHKOH-lee.”
The letter š is like English “sh” in “shoe.”