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dodala

Dodala is a grammatical form found in several South Slavic languages, derived from the verb dodati, meaning “to add.” It is the feminine singular past tense participle, used with a feminine subject to indicate that something was added.

In usage, dodala appears in sentences as a standard past-tense construction. For example, in Croatian, Bosnian,

Dodala is part of a family of related forms built from the same verb. Other common derivatives

Notable considerations: dodala is primarily a verb form and not widely recognized as a standalone noun, place,

or
Serbian
one
can
say
“Dodala
je
dvije
knjige,”
meaning
“She
added
two
books.”
In
Slovenian,
forms
with
a
feminine
subject
are
common
in
similar
contexts,
such
as
“Ona
je
dodala
sladkor”
(“She
added
sugar”).
The
exact
auxiliary
verb
and
word
order
can
vary
by
dialect
and
language,
but
the
meaning
remains
the
same:
a
female
subject
performed
the
act
of
adding.
include
dodavanje
(the
act
of
adding)
and
dodatan
(additional).
These
words
reflect
the
same
root
and
are
used
in
related
semantic
fields
around
addition
or
supplementary
content.
or
widely
used
proper
name.
In
linguistic
or
lexicographic
contexts,
it
is
treated
as
a
conjugated
form
rather
than
an
independent
lexical
item.
Because
meanings
and
usage
can
vary
somewhat
across
Slovenian,
Croatian,
Bosnian,
and
Serbian,
examples
should
be
checked
in
language-specific
grammar
references.