Questions & Answers about Ključevi su ispali na pod.
The base (dictionary) form is ključ (meaning key).
- ključ is masculine singular.
- ključevi is nominative plural of ključ.
So:
- ključ = one key
- ključevi = keys (subject of the sentence)
Because ključevi is in the nominative plural, which is used for the subject of the sentence.
In Croatian:
- The subject is in nominative.
- Ključevi are the ones doing the action (they fell), so they must be nominative.
Ključeve would be accusative plural, typically used for a direct object (e.g. Vidim ključeve – I see the keys), which is not the case here.
Su ispali is past tense (Croatian: perfekt).
It’s formed like this:
- auxiliary verb “biti” (to be) in the present tense: su (3rd person plural)
- past participle (L-participle) of the main verb: ispali (from ispasti, to fall out)
So:
Ključevi (subject) + su (they are) + ispali (fallen) → the keys have fallen / fell.
The verb must agree with the subject in number (singular/plural) and gender.
- Subject: ključevi = plural masculine
- Auxiliary: su = 3rd person plural of biti
- Participle: ispali = masculine plural form
If it were one key, you’d say:
- Ključ je ispao na pod. (singular masculine)
Here we have plural → su ispali is correct.
The infinitive is ispasti.
Basic meanings:
- ispasti = to fall out (of something), to come out, to drop out
- e.g. Ključevi su ispali iz džepa. – The keys fell out of the pocket.
Compared to:
- pasti = to fall (more general, just falling down)
- ispadati = imperfective counterpart of ispasti, often translated as to be falling out (repeatedly / over time).
In Ključevi su ispali na pod, ispasti suggests they fell (out / down) onto the floor as a completed event.
With prepositions like na (on), Croatian uses two different cases:
- Accusative = movement toward somewhere
- Locative = location / being at somewhere
Compare:
- na pod (accusative) → onto the floor (movement)
- na podu (locative) → on the floor (location, no movement)
In this sentence, the keys move and end up on the floor, so we use accusative:
Ključevi su ispali na pod. → They fell onto the floor.
Here, pod is in the accusative singular after na, because the verb expresses movement to a destination.
- Nominative: pod (the floor)
- Accusative: na pod (onto the floor)
Rule of thumb for na:
- Where? → locative (na podu)
- Where to? → accusative (na pod)
Pod means floor (inside a building, room, car, etc.).
Other words:
- tlo = ground, soil, surface (more formal / neutral, used in geography, science)
- zemlja = earth, ground, land (often outdoors, literal earth/soil, or country)
So:
- Ključevi su ispali na pod. – They fell onto the floor (indoors).
- Ključevi su ispali na tlo / na zemlju. – They fell onto the ground / earth (typically outdoors).
Yes, you can change word order. Croatian word order is flexible, and changes mainly emphasis, not basic meaning.
Some options:
- Ključevi su ispali na pod. (neutral: what happened to the keys?)
- Na pod su ispali ključevi. (emphasis on where they fell – onto the floor)
- Ispali su ključevi na pod. (emphasis on the falling action)
They all describe the same event; context and intonation decide what sounds most natural.
Su is a clitic (an unstressed short word), and Croatian clitics follow special placement rules:
- In a simple sentence, the clitic usually goes in second position (after the first stressed word or phrase).
So:
- Ključevi su ispali na pod. – subject first, then clitic
- Na pod su ispali ključevi. – prepositional phrase first, then clitic
You can’t normally put su at the very beginning or leave it out in full sentences:
- ❌ Su ključevi ispali na pod.
- ❌ Ključevi ispali na pod. (wrong in standard Croatian as a full sentence)
The most natural version is to add a dative clitic for “to me / my”:
- Ključevi su mi ispali na pod.
- Literally: The keys fell out on the floor to me → understood as My keys fell on the floor or I dropped my keys.
If you want to explicitly say “my keys”:
- Moji su ključevi ispali na pod.
- Moji ključevi su ispali na pod.
Yes, there is a nuance:
- pasti → pali (past participle)
- more general: they fell (just the act of falling)
- ispasti → ispali
- more specific: they fell out / dropped out / ended up down
In many contexts they overlap, but:
- Ključevi su ispali na pod. suggests they kind of fell out (of your pocket / hand) onto the floor.
- Ključevi su pali na pod. sounds a bit more neutral: they simply fell onto the floor.
Both are understandable; ispali is very common for keys, coins, etc. “falling out” of somewhere.
Pronunciation tips:
- klj – said together, not as three separate sounds.
- lj – a palatal l, similar to the lli in million (AmE) or lli in million (BrE).
- č – like ch in church (a hard “ch”).
Syllables: klju‑če‑vi
Stress is usually on the first syllable: KLJU‑če‑vi.
Yes, you can, but you’d use the imperfective verb padati:
- Ključevi padaju na pod. – The keys are falling onto the floor.
Or, if you want “are falling out”:
- Ključevi ispadaju na pod. – The keys are (in the process of) falling out onto the floor.
In your original sentence, su ispali describes a completed past event.