Breakdown of Un tren rapid pleacă la ora opt.
un
a
a pleca
to leave
la
at
ora
the hour
opt
eight
trenul
the train
rapid
fast
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Questions & Answers about Un tren rapid pleacă la ora opt.
What does rapid mean in this context?
The word rapid is an adjective meaning fast or express. In railway terminology, a tren rapid is an express train that makes fewer stops and travels faster than a local train.
Why is rapid placed after tren instead of before, as in English?
In Romanian, the default word order for adjectives is noun + adjective, not the other way around. So you say tren rapid (train fast) rather than rapid tren.
What gender is tren, and why do we use un before it?
Tren is a masculine noun (most Romanian nouns ending in a consonant are masculine). The word un is the masculine singular indefinite article (equivalent to English “a” or “an”), so un tren simply means a train.
What verb is pleacă, and what person and tense does it represent?
Pleacă is the third person singular present tense of the intransitive verb a pleca, which means to leave or to depart. Here it tells us that (it/he/she) leaves at a given time.
What sound does the letter ă represent, and how do I pronounce it in pleacă and oră?
The letter ă is the Romanian schwa (a mid-central vowel). It sounds like the a in English about or sofa.
- pleacă is pronounced [ple-ah-kuh] (schwa at the end)
- oră is pronounced [o-ruh] (schwa at the end)
Why do we say la ora before opt, and what does la ora opt literally mean?
To tell time in Romanian, you use la ora + a cardinal number. La means at, ora is the definite form of oră (“the hour”), and opt is eight. So la ora opt literally means at the hour eight, i.e. at eight o’clock.
Why is ora in the definite singular form, and why not plural?
When specifying a particular hour on the clock, oră takes the definite article -a to become ora (“the hour”). It remains singular because you are referring to one specific moment (the eight-o’clock hour), not multiple hours.
Why don’t we use an ordinal number like a opta instead of the cardinal opt here?
Clock times in Romanian always use cardinal numbers (one, two, three…), not ordinals (first, second, third…). So you say ora opt, not a opta oră. Ordinals (like a opta) are used when you talk about sequence or order, not clock time.
Can I drop ora and say pleacă la opt, or even use the numeral 8 as in pleacă la 8?
Yes. In everyday speech and in casual writing you often hear pleacă la opt or see pleacă la 8. However, la ora opt is the more complete, standard formulation.
How would I say “the fast train leaves at eight o’clock” if I want to specify the train instead of a train?
You change un tren to the definite form trenul, which is tren + -ul (the masculine singular definite article). The rest stays the same:
Trenul rapid pleacă la ora opt.
Can I change the word order to focus on the time, for example La ora opt pleacă un tren rapid?
Absolutely. Romanian word order is fairly flexible. Starting with La ora opt (“At eight o’clock…”) simply shifts emphasis to when the event happens. The core meaning remains a fast train departs at eight.