Breakdown of המועמדת השנייה חייכה ואמרה שהראיון הזה קצר יותר ממה שחשבה.
Questions & Answers about המועמדת השנייה חייכה ואמרה שהראיון הזה קצר יותר ממה שחשבה.
Why does המועמדת end in -ת, and what does the ה- mean?
המועמדת means the female candidate.
Two useful parts are packed into this one word:
- ה- = the
- -ת often marks a feminine singular noun
So:
- מועמד = a male candidate / candidate (masculine form)
- מועמדת = a female candidate
- המועמדת = the female candidate
In this sentence, the subject is specifically a woman, so the feminine form is used.
Why is it השנייה and not some other form of second?
השנייה means the second and it must agree with המועמדת in:
- gender: feminine
- number: singular
- definiteness: definite
Since מועמדת is feminine singular and definite, the adjective/ordinal must match it:
- שני / שניים = two / two (masculine forms in other contexts)
- שני is not the right form here
- שני/שנייה as an ordinal gives second
- השנייה = the second (feminine singular definite)
Also note that in Hebrew, adjectives and ordinal numbers usually come after the noun:
- המועמדת השנייה = the second candidate
Why do both words have ה- in המועמדת השנייה?
Because in Hebrew, when a noun is definite and it is followed by an adjective, the adjective is usually definite too.
So:
- מועמדת שנייה = a second candidate
- המועמדת השנייה = the second candidate
This is different from English, where only the appears once. In Hebrew, definiteness is typically shown on both the noun and its adjective.
What form is חייכה?
חייכה is the past tense, feminine singular form of the verb לחייך (to smile).
So:
- הוא חייך = he smiled
- היא חייכה = she smiled
Since the subject is המועמדת (female candidate), the verb must match that feminine singular subject.
Why is it ואמרה?
ו- means and, so:
- אמרה = she said
- ואמרה = and she said
Again, אמרה is the past feminine singular form, matching המועמדת.
So the sequence is:
- חייכה = she smiled
- ואמרה = and said / and she said
Hebrew often does not repeat the subject pronoun היא (she) if the verb form already makes it clear.
What does the ש- mean in שהראיון?
Here ש- means that.
So:
- אמרה שהראיון... = she said that the interview...
This ש- is a very common Hebrew connector meaning that, which, or that/when depending on context.
In this sentence, it introduces what she said:
- she said that the interview is shorter...
Why is it הראיון הזה and not הזה הראיון?
In Hebrew, demonstratives like this usually come after the noun.
So:
- הראיון הזה = this interview
Not:
- הזה הראיון ✗
Also notice:
- ראיון is a masculine singular noun
- so the demonstrative is הזה / actually in this phrase just הזה? Wait carefully: the sentence has הראיון הזה, where הזה is the masculine singular form of this
- for a feminine noun, you would use הזאת or זו in many contexts
Examples:
- הספר הזה = this book
- הילדה הזאת = this girl
So הראיון הזה is the normal Hebrew word order for this interview.
Why is it קצר יותר? How do comparisons work here?
קצר יותר means shorter.
Hebrew often makes comparisons with:
- יותר = more
- adjective + יותר = more + adjective / adjective-er in English
So:
- קצר = short
- קצר יותר = shorter / more short
Then Hebrew adds מ- for than:
- קצר יותר מ... = shorter than...
So the structure is:
- הראיון הזה קצר יותר... = this interview is shorter...
A key point: קצר is masculine singular because it describes הראיון (the interview), which is masculine singular.
Why is the adjective קצר masculine if the sentence started with a female candidate?
Because קצר describes הראיון (the interview), not המועמדת (the candidate).
Hebrew adjectives agree with the noun they describe, not necessarily with the main subject of the whole sentence.
Here:
- המועמדת = feminine singular
- הראיון = masculine singular
So:
- verbs referring to the candidate are feminine:
- חייכה
- אמרה
- חשבה
- the adjective referring to the interview is masculine:
- קצר
What does ממה שחשבה mean exactly?
ממה שחשבה means something like than what she thought or than she thought.
This part can be broken down as:
- מ- = than / from
- מה = what
- ש- = that / which
- חשבה = she thought
Together:
- יותר ממה שחשבה = more/shorter than what she thought
In smoother English, we usually just say:
- shorter than she thought
This is a very common Hebrew comparison pattern:
- יותר ממה ש...
- פחות ממה ש...
- adjective/comparative + ממה ש...
Examples:
- זה קל יותר ממה שחשבתי = It’s easier than I thought.
- החדר גדול יותר ממה שציפינו = The room is bigger than we expected.
Why doesn’t Hebrew include a separate word for she before חשבה?
Because Hebrew often leaves out subject pronouns when the verb form already shows who the subject is.
חשבה by itself already means she thought.
So Hebrew does not need:
- שהיא חשבה in this sentence
although in some contexts Hebrew can include היא for emphasis or clarity.
Here, the feminine singular verb ending makes the subject clear, so שחשבה is perfectly natural.
What form is חשבה?
חשבה is the past tense, feminine singular form of לחשוב (to think).
So:
- הוא חשב = he thought
- היא חשבה = she thought
It matches the same female subject, המועמדת.
This is one nice feature of the sentence: you can clearly see feminine singular agreement across several verbs:
- חייכה = she smiled
- אמרה = she said
- חשבה = she thought
Is קצר יותר ממה שחשבה the only way to say shorter than she thought?
It is a very standard and natural way.
The pattern יותר ממה ש... is extremely common in modern Hebrew for comparisons such as:
- bigger than I expected
- easier than we thought
- shorter than she imagined
Hebrew speakers sometimes use slightly different phrasing in different registers, but for learners, this structure is one of the most useful and natural to know:
- [adjective] יותר ממה ש...
So this sentence is a very good model to learn from.
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