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ích

ých is a common inflectional ending found in Czech and Slovak for adjectives and certain participial forms in the genitive plural. In these languages, the ending signals a shift from a base nominal or adjectival form to a form used when describing or referring to multiple nouns in the genitive case.

In Czech, the genitive plural ending -ých appears after stems to modify masculine animate, masculine inanimate,

In Slovak, -ých serves a parallel role, marking genitive plural adjectives and certain participial forms. Examples

Orthography and scope: the form is written with the letter ý (y with acute) followed by ch,

Limitations: -ých is not a universal ending for all adjectives in these languages; its use is constrained

See also: genitive case, Czech grammar, Slovak grammar, Slavic inflection.

and
neuter
nouns
in
phrases
such
as
“nových
lidí”
(new
people),
“tichých
lesů”
(quiet
forests),
or
“krásných
žen”
(beautiful
women).
It
is
one
of
several
genitive
plural
endings
that
adjectives
can
take,
varying
with
the
stem
and
the
noun
they
modify.
include
“nových
ľudí”
(new
people)
and
“tichých
lesov”
(silent
forests).
The
exact
choice
of
ending
depends
on
the
stem
and
the
grammatical
gender
and
number
of
the
noun.
reflecting
the
typical
Czech
and
Slovak
habit
of
marking
long
vowel
quality
in
inflectional
endings.
In
other
Slavic
languages,
similar
genitive-plural
endings
exist
but
may
be
spelled
differently
(for
example,
without
diacritics
in
Polish).
to
specific
grammatical
contexts,
primarily
the
genitive
plural,
and
interacts
with
the
surrounding
noun’s
gender
and
number.