Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Romanian grammar and vocabulary.
Questions & Answers about Telefonul meu este pe masă.
What does the suffix -ul do in telefonul?
The suffix -ul is the masculine singular definite article in Romanian. Instead of saying the phone, you attach -ul to telefon to get telefonul (“the phone”).
Why is meu placed after telefonul, and why not before like in English?
In Romanian the possessive adjective follows the noun. It must agree in gender and number with the noun. Since telefonul is masculine singular, you use meu (“my”). If the noun were feminine, you would use mea.
Could meu change if there were more phones (“my phones”)?
Yes. Romanian has a neuter gender for nouns like telefon, which behaves as masculine in singular and feminine in plural. So:
• One phone: telefonul meu (“my phone”) – meu is masculine singular.
• Phones: telefoanele mele (“my phones”) – mele is the feminine plural form of the possessive.
Why is pe used before masă here, and what does it mean?
Pe is the Romanian preposition for on (and sometimes upon). You use pe to say something is on top of a surface. So pe masă means on (the) table.
Why isn’t there a definite article on masă (why not masa) if it’s “the table”?
After certain locative prepositions (like pe, în, lângă, sub), Romanian uses the bare noun without the article for unmodified places. So pe masă literally means “on table” but is understood as on the table. If you modify the table (add an adjective or a possessive), you include the article: pe masa mea (“on my table”) or pe masa mare (“on the big table”).
What case is masă in, and why doesn’t its form change after pe?
Prepositions in Romanian usually govern the accusative. For feminine singular nouns like masă, the nominative and accusative forms are identical (masă), so you don’t see any visible change.
Why is the full form este used instead of the clitic e?
Este is the standard third-person singular of a fi (to be). In spoken or informal Romanian people often say e, as in Telefonul meu e pe masă, but in writing and in more formal contexts you’d typically write or say este.
Can I use a different verb to locate the phone, like stă?
Yes. Stă is the third-person singular of a sta (to stand/stay) and is often used to indicate location. So Telefonul meu stă pe masă also means My phone is on the table.
How do I say “The phone is mine” without repeating meu?
You switch to the analytic possessive al meu: Telefonul este al meu. Here al meu means “mine.”
Could you break down the sentence word by word?
Certainly:
• Telefonul = telefon (phone) + -ul (definite article) = “the phone.”
• meu = “my” (masculine singular possessive).
• este = “is.”
• pe = “on.”
• masă = “table” (bare form after a locative preposition, understood as “the table”).