Ei merg la parc dimineață și seara.

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Questions & Answers about Ei merg la parc dimineață și seara.

Why is the pronoun Ei explicitly used, since Romanian often drops subject pronouns?
In Romanian, verb endings usually indicate the subject, so pronouns are often omitted. However, the verb merg is ambiguous: it is both first person singular (eu merg) and third person plural (ei merg) in the present tense. Including Ei clarifies that the subject is they, not I.
What does merg represent in terms of person, number, and tense, and what is its infinitive?
Merg is the present indicative form of the verb a merge (to go). In this sentence, it’s third person plural, matching ei (they). It can also be first person singular (eu merg), but context or a pronoun distinguishes the meaning.
Why is the preposition la used with parc, instead of în or another preposition?
When expressing direction or going to a place, Romanian uses la + place name: a merge la școală, la cinema, la parc. Using în parc would focus on location or being inside the park rather than the action of going there.
Why is parc indefinite here (no article)? When would you use the definite form parcul?
Here parc is indefinite, indicating a general or habitual visit to any park. If you refer to a specific, known park, you would use the definite form: la parcul (e.g., Ei merg la parcul din apropiere – They go to the nearby park).
What role do dimineață and seara play, and why aren’t they preceded by articles or prepositions?
In this context, dimineață (morning) and seara (evening) function as adverbs of time, telling us when the action happens. Time adverbials don’t require prepositions or articles. When you treat them as nouns in other contexts, they can take the definite article (e.g., dimineața – “the morning”).
Can you use the definite article with those time words and say dimineața și seara? Is that correct?
Yes. It’s common and perfectly correct to say dimineața and seara with the definite article for habitual actions: Ei merg la parc dimineața și seara. Both forms (with and without articles) are acceptable, with only a slight difference in nuance.
Is it acceptable to change the word order to Ei merg dimineață și seara la parc? How does that affect the sentence?
Yes, Romanian allows flexibility in word order. Ei merg dimineață și seara la parc is grammatically correct. Placing the time expressions earlier shifts the emphasis slightly onto when they go rather than where.
How do you pronounce dimineață and seara, and where is the stress in each word?
Dimineață is pronounced approximately dee-mee-NEH-uh-tsuh, with the stress on NEH. Seara is pronounced SEH-ah-rah, with the stress on SEH. The letter ă sounds like a neutral vowel similar to the ‘a’ in English sofa.