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Obydwa

Obydwa is a Polish determiner and pronoun meaning “both of the two,” used to refer to two items or persons. It is part of a small set of forms that mark gender and number in agreement with the noun it modifies. The form obydwa is used with neuter nouns, while other gendered forms exist for two items: oba for masculine personal nouns and obie for feminine nouns. For people, another form, oboje, is commonly used to refer to two individuals in a masculine or mixed-gender context.

In practice, obydwa precedes the noun it describes and agrees in case with that noun, functioning much

Examples of usage include sentences such as “Obydwa okna są zamknięte” (Both windows are closed), where okna

Obydwa is widely used in standard Polish and appears in everyday speech, writing, and formal texts. It

like
the
English
word
“both.”
It
emphasizes
that
two
items
or
people
are
being
considered
together
rather
than
separately.
The
term
can
appear
in
various
grammatical
cases,
just
like
adjectives
in
Polish,
and
its
endings
change
accordingly
when
the
sentence
requires
different
cases
or
numbers.
is
a
neuter
plural
noun,
and
“Obie
kobiety
były
na
spotkaniu”
(Both
women
were
at
the
meeting),
where
kobiety
is
feminine
plural.
The
word
conveys
a
precise
scope—two
items
only—without
implying
anything
about
more
than
two.
is
typically
learned
as
part
of
basic
pronoun
and
adjective
agreement
in
Polish
grammar.