O diretor disse que ninguém deve entrar no refeitório com as mãos sujas de giz.

Questions & Answers about O diretor disse que ninguém deve entrar no refeitório com as mãos sujas de giz.

Why is there o before diretor?

Portuguese uses definite articles much more often than English. O diretor means the director/headmaster/principal, referring to a specific person that speaker and listener can identify.

In English, we often drop the in some contexts, but in Portuguese the article sounds natural here.

What is disse?

Disse is the preterite form of dizerto say / to tell. So o diretor disse means the director said.

It is irregular, so you just have to learn it as a form:

  • dizerdisse

Also, dizer que is the normal way to report what someone said:

  • Ele disse que... = He said that...
Why is it disse in the past, but deve in the present?

Because Portuguese does not always shift the tense back the way English often does.

Here, the director spoke in the past — disse — but the rule is still valid now, so Portuguese keeps the present:

In English, we often say said that nobody should enter..., but Portuguese can keep the present idea if the statement is still true or still applies.

Why is ninguém used without não?

Because ninguém already has a negative meaning: nobody / no one.

When a negative word like ninguém comes before the verb, Portuguese normally does not add não:

  • Ninguém deve entrar. = Nobody should enter.

But if ninguém comes after the verb, then não is needed:

  • Não vi ninguém. = I didn’t see anybody.
Why is it ninguém deve and not ninguém devem?

Because ninguém is grammatically singular, even though it refers to no people at all.

So it takes a singular verb:

  • ninguém deve
  • not ninguém devem

This is similar to English nobody is, not nobody are.

Does deve mean must or should here?

It can suggest either must or should, depending on context.

In this sentence, it expresses a rule or obligation, so English could translate it as:

  • should not enter
  • must not enter
  • is not supposed to enter

The exact strength depends on tone and situation. In a school rule, it often feels fairly strong.

Why is it entrar no refeitório?

Because no is a contraction of em + o:

  • em ono

With entrar, Portuguese usually uses a preposition where English often does not:

  • entrar no refeitório = enter the dining hall / go into the cafeteria

So even though English says enter the cafeteria, Portuguese says more literally enter into the cafeteria.

What exactly does refeitório mean in European Portuguese?

Refeitório is a dining hall, canteen, or cafeteria, especially in a school, workplace, or institution.

In Portugal, it sounds quite normal in institutional contexts. In a school sentence like this, refeitório is a very natural word.

Why is it com as mãos and not com as suas mãos?

Portuguese often uses the definite article with body parts instead of a possessive.

So:

  • com as mãos sujas = with dirty hands

The possessive suas is not necessary because it is obvious whose hands are being talked about. If you said com as suas mãos, it would sound more emphatic or contrastive.

Why is sujas feminine plural?

Because it agrees with os.

So the adjective must also be feminine plural:

  • mãos sujas

Compare:

  • a mão suja = the dirty hand
  • as mãos sujas = the dirty hands
Why is it sujas de giz and not sujas com giz?

Because sujo de is a very common Portuguese pattern meaning dirty with / stained with / covered in something.

So:

  • mãos sujas de giz = hands dirty with chalk

If you said com giz, it could sound more like with chalk in the sense of having chalk or using chalk, not necessarily stained by it.

How is giz pronounced in European Portuguese?

In European Portuguese, giz is pronounced with a final sound like sh:

  • gizgeesh (very approximate)

A few other tricky words here are:

  • ninguém — ends with a nasal sound
  • mãos — also has a nasal vowel/diphthong
  • refeitóriostress on

If you are learning European Portuguese, the nasal sounds in ninguém and mãos are especially important to notice.

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