האמנית סיפרה שהציור הזה חשוב לה יותר מהפסל שעומד בכניסה.

Breakdown of האמנית סיפרה שהציור הזה חשוב לה יותר מהפסל שעומד בכניסה.

זה
this
ב
at
לעמוד
to stand
ש
that
יותר
more
מ
than
חשוב
important
לה
to her
לספר
to tell
כניסה
entrance
ציור
painting
אמנית
female artist
פסל
sculpture

Questions & Answers about האמנית סיפרה שהציור הזה חשוב לה יותר מהפסל שעומד בכניסה.

Why is האמנית feminine, and what exactly does it mean?

האמנית means the female artist.

  • אמנית = a feminine singular noun meaning artist
  • ה־ = the

So:

  • אמנית = an artist / a female artist
  • האמנית = the artist / the female artist

The masculine form is אמן.

Why is the verb סיפרה written in that form?

סיפרה is the past tense, feminine singular form of the verb לספר.

It matches the subject האמנית, which is feminine singular. Hebrew verbs in the past tense usually agree with the subject in gender and number.

So:

  • הוא סיפר = he told
  • היא סיפרה = she told
Does סיפרה mean exactly said?

Not exactly. סיפרה comes from לספר, which more literally means told, related, or recounted.

In many contexts, English may translate it naturally as said or told, but the Hebrew verb suggests that she told something rather than just uttered a short statement.

What does the ש־ in שהציור mean?

Here ש־ means that.

It introduces a clause after סיפרה:

  • סיפרה שהציור הזה חשוב לה...
  • She told [that this painting is important to her...]

This ש־ is very common in Hebrew and can often mean that, which, or who, depending on the sentence.

Why is it הציור הזה and not הזה הציור?

In Hebrew, demonstratives like this usually come after the noun.

So:

  • הציור הזה = this painting

This is the normal pattern in Modern Hebrew:

  • הספר הזה = this book
  • הילדה הזאת = this girl

Also notice that the demonstrative agrees with the noun:

  • הזה = masculine singular
  • הזאת = feminine singular

Since ציור is masculine singular, the sentence uses הזה.

Why is חשוב masculine singular?

Because חשוב agrees with הציור, not with האמנית.

The sentence is saying that the painting is important to her, so the adjective matches הציור:

  • ציור is masculine singular
  • therefore: חשוב

If the subject were feminine, you would get חשובה:

  • התמונה הזאת חשובה לי = this picture is important to me
Why is there no Hebrew word for is in הציור הזה חשוב לה?

In the present tense, Hebrew usually does not use a word for is / am / are in sentences like this.

So Hebrew says:

  • הציור הזה חשוב לה

Literally, that is more like:

  • this painting important to her

But in natural English, we translate it as:

  • this painting is important to her

In past or future, Hebrew does use forms of היה:

  • הציור היה חשוב לה = the painting was important to her
What does לה mean here?

לה means to her.

It is the preposition ל־ meaning to/for, attached to the pronoun her.

With adjectives like חשוב meaning important, Hebrew commonly uses this structure:

  • חשוב לי = important to me
  • חשוב לו = important to him
  • חשוב לה = important to her

So חשוב לה means important to her.

How does יותר מהפסל mean more than the statue?

יותר means more, and מ־ means than / from in comparisons.

So:

  • יותר מהפסל = more than the statue

Hebrew often uses מ־ after יותר:

  • גדול יותר מהבית = bigger than the house
  • חשוב יותר מהפסל = more important than the statue
Why is it מהפסל and not מן הפסל?

The comparison marker מ־ is a shortened form of מן.

In modern Hebrew, it is very common to attach it directly to the next word:

  • מ + הפסל = מהפסל

So מהפסל is the normal modern way to say than the statue or from the statue, depending on context.

What is שעומד בכניסה doing in the sentence?

It is a relative clause describing הפסל.

So:

  • הפסל שעומד בכניסה = the statue that stands at the entrance / the statue standing at the entrance

Here:

  • ש־ = that / which
  • עומד = stands / is standing
  • בכניסה = at the entrance

This whole part tells you which statue is meant.

Why is the verb עומד in the present form?

עומד is the masculine singular present form of לעמוד, meaning to stand.

It matches הפסל, which is masculine singular. In Hebrew, the present tense often looks like a participle, so עומד can mean:

  • stands
  • is standing

If the noun were feminine, you would get עומדת.

Why is it בכניסה and not a separate word for the entrance?

Hebrew prepositions often attach directly to nouns.

Here:

  • ב־ = in / at
  • כניסה = entrance

When ב־ is attached to a definite noun with ה־, the forms combine, so:

  • ב + הכניסה becomes בכניסה

So בכניסה means in the entrance or, more naturally here, at the entrance.

Why is הפסל definite?

הפסל means the statue, not a statue.

Hebrew uses the definite article ה־ because the sentence refers to a specific statue, identified by the phrase שעומד בכניסה.

So the idea is not just any statue, but the statue at the entrance.

Could שעומד בכניסה refer to הציור instead of הפסל?

In this sentence, it naturally refers to הפסל, the nearest suitable noun.

So the structure is understood as:

  • more than the statue that stands at the entrance

Not:

  • the painting that stands at the entrance

Also, semantically, a statue is much more likely to stand at the entrance than a painting, so the meaning is very clear.

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