התברר שהכרטיס שלי היה בתיק הקטן כל הזמן.

Breakdown of התברר שהכרטיס שלי היה בתיק הקטן כל הזמן.

קטן
small
ב
in
להיות
to be
כל
all
זמן
time
ש
that
שלי
my
תיק
bag
כרטיס
ticket
להתברר
to turn out

Questions & Answers about התברר שהכרטיס שלי היה בתיק הקטן כל הזמן.

What does התברר mean in this sentence?

התברר is the past tense of להתברר. In this kind of sentence, it usually means it turned out, it became clear, or it was выясened / clarified depending on context.

Here it has the common meaning it turned out or it became clear.

So the sentence is structured like:

התברר ש... = It turned out that...

Why is התברר in masculine singular if there is no obvious subject?

Hebrew often uses the 3rd person masculine singular form for impersonal statements like this.

In English, we say it turned out that..., where it is just a dummy subject. Hebrew usually does not need a separate word for that it, so the verb simply appears in the default impersonal form:

התברר ש... = It turned out that...

So the masculine singular form here does not mean that some masculine person did the action. It is just the normal impersonal way to say this.

What is the role of ש in שהכרטיס?

ש־ means that.

It introduces the clause that follows התברר:

התברר שהכרטיס שלי היה...
= It turned out that my ticket was...

In Hebrew, ש־ is usually written as a prefix attached to the next word, which is why you see שהכרטיס as one written unit.

Why is it הכרטיס שלי and not just כרטיס שלי?

In Modern Hebrew, when you say my ..., your ..., his ..., and so on with שלי / שלך / שלו, the noun is usually made definite with ה־ if you mean a specific item.

So:

הכרטיס שלי = my ticket / my card
הספר שלי = my book
הבית שלי = my house

For an English speaker, this can feel surprising, because English does not say the my ticket. But Hebrew often does use the definite article in this structure.

So הכרטיס שלי is the normal way to say my ticket in a specific sense.

Does כרטיס mean ticket or card?

It can mean either one.

כרטיס is a broad word that can refer to:

  • a ticket
  • a card
  • sometimes a pass or badge, depending on context

So the exact English translation depends on the situation. If the meaning shown to the learner is ticket, then that is the right reading here.

Why is the verb היה used?

היה is the past tense form of to be for a masculine singular subject.

The subject here is הכרטיס שלי. Since כרטיס is masculine singular, Hebrew uses:

היה = was

Compare:

  • הכרטיס היה = the ticket was
  • המחברת הייתה = the notebook was
  • הכרטיסים היו = the tickets were

So היה agrees with כרטיס.

Why is it בתיק and not ב התיק?

The prefix ב־ means in.

When ב־ comes before a definite noun with ה־, Hebrew combines them. So:

  • ב + התיק becomes בתיק

This is very common in Hebrew. The same thing happens with other prepositions too.

So:

בתיק = in the bag

Even though you do not see a separate ה in normal spelling here, the noun is still definite.

Why does הקטן come after תיק, and why does it also have ה־?

In Hebrew, adjectives normally come after the noun.

So:

  • תיק קטן = a small bag
  • התיק הקטן = the small bag

Hebrew adjectives also agree with the noun in:

  • gender
  • number
  • definiteness

Since תיק here is definite, the adjective must also be definite:

התיק הקטן

In the sentence, this appears after the preposition as:

בתיק הקטן = in the small bag

What exactly does כל הזמן mean here?

Literally, כל הזמן means all the time.

But in this sentence, the most natural English meaning is often:

  • the whole time
  • all along

It emphasizes that the ticket was in the small bag during the entire period, even though the speaker did not realize it until later.

So the feeling is not just continuous time in a general sense, but more specifically:

it was there the whole time

Can the word order be changed?

Yes. Hebrew word order is fairly flexible, and you can move parts of the sentence for emphasis.

For example, these are also possible:

התברר שהכרטיס שלי היה כל הזמן בתיק הקטן
התברר שכל הזמן הכרטיס שלי היה בתיק הקטן

These versions are very similar in meaning, but the emphasis shifts a little.

The original sentence:

התברר שהכרטיס שלי היה בתיק הקטן כל הזמן

is completely natural, and placing כל הזמן at the end gives a nice final emphasis, similar to the whole time or all along in English.

Could this sentence be translated with had been in English even though Hebrew uses היה?

Yes.

Hebrew often uses a simple past form where English may prefer had been, depending on the context.

So although the Hebrew says היה literally as was, English might naturally say:

  • It turned out that my ticket was in the small bag the whole time.
  • It turned out that my ticket had been in the small bag the whole time.

Both can work in English. Hebrew does not need a separate past perfect form here to express the idea clearly.

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