הסופרת הזאת כותבת על אנשים רגילים, ובכל זאת כל דמות שלה מעניינת.

Breakdown of הסופרת הזאת כותבת על אנשים רגילים, ובכל זאת כל דמות שלה מעניינת.

זאת
this
ו
and
איש
person
שלה
her
לכתוב
to write
כל
every
על
about
מעניין
interesting
דמות
character
סופרת
female author
רגיל
ordinary
בכל זאת
even so

Questions & Answers about הסופרת הזאת כותבת על אנשים רגילים, ובכל זאת כל דמות שלה מעניינת.

Why does הזאת come after הסופרת? In English we say this author, not author this.

In Hebrew, demonstratives like this and that usually come after the noun:

  • הספר הזה = this book
  • הילדה הזאת = this girl
  • הסופרת הזאת = this female writer / this author

So the normal pattern is:

the + noun + this/that

This is one of the first word-order differences English speakers have to get used to.

Why is there a ה־ on הסופרת if הזאת already means this?

That is just how standard Hebrew works with nouns plus demonstratives.

You normally say:

  • הספר הזה
  • העיר הזאת
  • האנשים האלה

So the noun takes the definite article ה־, and then the demonstrative comes after it.

Even though English does not say the this author, Hebrew does use the definite article here. So הסופרת הזאת is the normal way to say this author.

Is סופרת specifically feminine?

Yes. סופרת is the feminine singular form, meaning female writer / authoress / woman author, though in natural English we usually just say author or writer.

Compare:

  • סופר = male writer / author
  • סופרת = female writer / author

Because the subject is feminine singular, the verb later is also feminine singular: כותבת.

Why is the verb כותבת and not some form meaning to write?

כותבת is the present-tense feminine singular form of to write.

Hebrew present tense is built from participle-like forms, and it agrees with gender and number:

  • כותב = he writes / is writing
  • כותבת = she writes / is writing
  • כותבים = they write (masculine/mixed)
  • כותבות = they write (feminine)

Since הסופרת is feminine singular, the sentence uses כותבת.

Does כותבת mean writes or is writing?

It can mean either one, depending on context.

Hebrew present tense often covers both:

  • she writes
  • she is writing

In this sentence, because it describes a general habit or style, writes is the more natural English translation.

Why is it על אנשים רגילים without the? Why not על האנשים הרגילים?

Because the sentence is talking about ordinary people in general, not a specific group already known to the listener.

So:

  • על אנשים רגילים = about ordinary people
  • על האנשים הרגילים = about the ordinary people

Also notice adjective agreement:

  • אנשים = masculine plural
  • רגילים = masculine plural adjective

Hebrew adjectives usually come after the noun and match it in gender, number, and definiteness.

What exactly is going on in ובכל זאת?

ובכל זאת is a very common connector meaning something like:

  • and yet
  • nevertheless
  • all the same
  • even so

It is made of:

  • ו־ = and
  • בכל זאת = nevertheless / despite that

So the sentence first gives one idea, then introduces a contrast:

She writes about ordinary people, and yet every character of hers is interesting.

Why does Hebrew use כל דמות instead of a plural like all her characters?

Because כל + singular noun often means every.

So:

  • כל דמות = every character
  • כל ילד = every child
  • כל יום = every day

This is very common in Hebrew. Even though English sometimes prefers a plural idea like all her characters, Hebrew often uses כל with a singular noun to express each/every.

Why is possession expressed as דמות שלה instead of attaching something directly to the noun?

Modern Hebrew very often expresses possession with של plus a pronoun:

  • שלי = mine / my
  • שלך = yours
  • שלו = his
  • שלה = hers / her

So:

  • דמות שלה = a character of hers / her character

In more formal or literary Hebrew, you may also see a suffix form like דמותה. But in everyday modern Hebrew, דמות שלה is very natural and common.

Why is it מעניינת and not מעניין?

Because דמות is a feminine singular noun, and the adjective must agree with it.

  • דמות = feminine singular
  • מעניינת = interesting (feminine singular)

Compare:

  • ספר מעניין = an interesting book
  • דמות מעניינת = an interesting character

So the agreement is completely regular.

Where is the word is in כל דמות שלה מעניינת?

In Hebrew, the verb to be is usually not expressed in the present tense.

So Hebrew says literally:

  • כל דמות שלה מעניינת
  • every character of hers interesting

But in English we must say:

  • Every character of hers is interesting.

This is a basic feature of Hebrew nominal sentences in the present tense.

Could the sentence have used אבל instead of ובכל זאת?

Yes, but the nuance would be slightly different.

  • אבל = but
  • ובכל זאת = and yet / nevertheless / even so

ובכל זאת sounds a bit stronger and more expressive. It emphasizes that the second part is true despite what you might expect from the first part.

So here it nicely conveys:

She writes about ordinary people, yet even so every character is interesting.

Is there anything important about adjective agreement in this sentence?

Yes—this sentence is a good example of how often Hebrew agreement appears.

You can see it in several places:

  • הסופרת = feminine singular
  • הזאת = feminine singular demonstrative
  • כותבת = feminine singular verb form
  • אנשים רגילים = masculine plural noun + adjective
  • דמות = feminine singular
  • מעניינת = feminine singular adjective

So one sentence shows three major Hebrew patterns at once:

  1. noun + demonstrative agreement
  2. subject + present-tense verb agreement
  3. noun + adjective agreement

That is one reason this sentence is very useful for learners.

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