Serbian Modal Verbs: moći, morati, hteti, želeti
Want to say "I can", "I must" or "I want" in Serbian? You'll need the four core modal verbs: moći (can), morati (must), hteti (will/want) and želeti (to wish). The trick is that none of them stand alone — each needs a second verb to carry the real action, and that verb comes in one of two equally correct shapes. You can use "da" + the present, as in "Mogu da dođem", or the bare infinitive, "Mogu doći". Same meaning, just different register: "da" + present rules everyday speech in Serbia, while the infinitive feels a touch more formal. Watch out for the classic slip — never conjugate that second verb (no "mogu dolazim"). And note hteti does double duty as the engine of the Serbian future tense.
Examples
- Mogu da dođem. I can come.
- Moram da radim. I have to work.
- Želim da učim srpski. I want to learn Serbian.
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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How do you say „mogu doći“? You can say „mogu doći“ or „mogu da dođem“ — both are perfectly correct. But if you say „mogu dolazim“, that's a mistake. Let's see how modal verbs work.
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Modal verbs express what you can, must and want to do. They never stand alone — they always need a second verb that carries the real action.
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Here are the four most important ones. „Moći“ means to be able to, so „can“. „Morati“ is obligation, „must“. „Hteti“ means „will“ or „want“, and it builds the future. And „želeti“ is a wish, „to wish“.
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Now the key point: after a modal verb you have two options. You can use „da“ plus the present, for example „mogu da dođem“. Or the bare infinitive, „mogu doći“. Same meaning, just two styles.
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Let's start with „moći“. „Mogu da dođem“ means that I'm able to come, that it's possible. The modal verb „mogu“ is in the present, and the action comes after „da“. Mogu da dođem.
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The same sentence, but with the infinitive. „Mogu doći“ — the meaning is exactly the same. There's no „da“ here, just the bare infinitive „doći“. You'll hear both in everyday speech. Mogu doći.
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Now „morati“ — obligation. „Moram da radim“ means that work is something I have to do, I have no choice. The verb „moram“ shows the obligation, and „raditi“ is the action. Moram da radim.
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Let's move on to „želeti“ — a wish. „Želim da učim srpski“ means that this is my wish, what I want. After „želim“ comes „da“ plus the present, „da učim“. Želim da učim srpski.
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And „hteti“ — the special one. „Hoću da idem“ means „want“, but the same verb also builds the future tense. „Hteti“ is the bridge to the future, so remember it well. Hoću da idem.
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And now the most common mistake. After a modal verb, the second verb does NOT change for person. It's not „mogu dolazim“ — that's two personal forms together. It has to be the infinitive „mogu doći“ or „da“ plus the present „mogu da dođem“.
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A little tip to make the choice easier. In speech and in the east of the Serbian-speaking area, „da“ plus the present is more common. The infinitive sounds a bit more formal and is more frequent in the west. Both are correct — go with your feel for it.
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Let's recap. The modal verbs moći, morati, hteti and želeti always need a second verb. After them comes the infinitive or „da“ plus the present — never a bare change for person. And „hteti“ also builds your future.