Questions & Answers about Ona mi pomaže svaki dan.
What does the word in bold do in Ona mi pomaže svaki dan?
Why can’t I say Ona pomaže mi?
Because short pronouns like mi are clitics and must sit in “second position,” right after the first stressed word/phrase in the clause. Good options:
- Ona mi pomaže svaki dan.
- Pomaže mi svaki dan.
- Svaki dan mi pomaže.
- Ona mi svaki dan pomaže. Unnatural/wrong: Ona pomaže mi.
Can I drop ona?
What’s the difference between mi and meni?
- mi = clitic dative (“to me”), used in second position.
- meni = stressed/full dative, used for emphasis or after prepositions. Examples:
- Neutral: Ona mi pomaže.
- Emphatic: Ona meni pomaže (a tebi ne).
- Fronted emphasis: Meni pomaže svaki dan. Don’t double them in standard Croatian (avoid: Ona mi meni pomaže).
Why is it svaki dan sometimes and svakog(a) dana other times?
Both mean “every day” and are correct:
- svaki dan = Accusative of time
- svakog(a) dana = Genitive of time Style-wise, svakog(a) dana can feel a bit more formal/literary, but both are very common.
Is dan the direct object here?
Can I use an adverb instead of svaki dan?
Why is it pomaže and not pomogne?
Aspect. pomagati (imperfective) = ongoing/habitual help, which matches svaki dan. pomoći/pomognuti (perfective) is for single, completed events. So:
- Habitual: Ona mi pomaže svaki dan.
- Single/once: Ona mi je pomogla jučer. Using perfective present with a habitual adverbial (e.g., Ona mi pomogne svaki dan) is ungrammatical.
How do I say “She helped me every day / She used to help me every day”?
Use the past of the imperfective: Ona mi je pomagala svaki dan. This shows repeated/habitual action in the past. Note clitic order: mi je.
Where do the clitics go in the past tense?
They still go to second position, and the cluster keeps a fixed order. In practice for this sentence:
- Ona mi je pomogla jučer.
- Jučer mi je pomogla.
- Je li mi pomogla jučer? (Yes/no question with li) Avoid: Ona je mi pomogla.
How do I negate it?
How do I ask “Does she help me every day?”
Can pomaže stand without a dative pronoun?
Yes, if the context makes sense:
- With a prepositional phrase: Ona pomaže u kuhinji. / Ona mi pomaže s (sa) domaćom zadaćom. / Ona mi pomaže oko zadaće.
- Generic statement: Ona rado pomaže.
How do I say “She helps me with homework”?
Common options:
- Ona mi pomaže s domaćom zadaćom. (Instrumental after s/sa)
- Ona mi pomaže oko zadaće. (Genitive after oko, idiomatic “with/regarding”) Both are natural.
Is there any ambiguity with mi meaning “we”?
How do I pronounce ž in pomaže?
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