The verb jít normally means “to go / to walk.” But in the fixed pattern jde o… it stops being about walking entirely. Instead it means “it’s about…”, “it concerns…” or “what someone is after.” It’s impersonal — there’s no real subject doing the “going.”
1. Jde o… = “it’s about / it’s a matter of”
Use jde o + the thing (in the accusative) to say what a situation is really about or what’s at stake.
2. Add a person: někomu jde o něco
Now the useful part. Put a person in the dative case (the “to whom” form) and the phrase means “what that person wants / is after / is aiming for.” The structure is: [person in dative] + jde + o + [thing in accusative].
3. Watch the two meanings
Because the same words do two jobs, context decides. Compare:
- Jde o peníze. — It’s about money. (the topic / what’s at stake)
- Jde mu o peníze. — He’s (only) after money. (his goal / motivation)
Add the dative person and you shift from “what the situation is about” to “what that person wants.”
4. Handy ready-made phrases
- O nic nejde. — It’s no big deal. / It doesn’t matter.
- O co ti vlastně jde? — What are you actually getting at?
- Jde mi o tebe. — I care about you. / It’s you I’m worried about.
- Přesně o to jde. — That’s exactly the point.
So whenever you see jde o…, don’t think “going” — think “it’s about / what someone wants.” Add a person in the dative and you’re asking what they’re really after.
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