The preposition o can mean “about” or “for,” and it takes two different cases depending on the meaning of the verb. The good news: the split is logical.
1. “o” + locative (6th) = about a topic
When o means “about” (a subject you speak or think of), it takes the locative — the “o kom, o čem” form.
- mluvit o — to talk about
- bavit se o — to chat about
- číst o — to read about
2. “o” + accusative (4th) = interest, care, asking, leaning
When o points toward a target — something you want, care for, ask for or lean on — it takes the accusative, the “o koho, o co” form.
- zajímat se o — to be interested in
- starat se o — to take care of
- požádat o — to ask for
- bát se o — to fear for
- opírat se o — to lean on / against
3. The minimal pair to memorise
Even the pronoun looks different: mě (accusative) vs mně (locative). That little extra n is your clue.
The takeaway: don’t learn the preposition alone — learn verb + preposition + case as one chunk. “About a topic” → locative; “toward / for / caring about a target” → accusative.
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