Breakdown of Iarba din grădină este verde primăvara.
a fi
to be
din
from
grădina
the garden
iarba
the grass
verde
green
primăvara
in spring
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Questions & Answers about Iarba din grădină este verde primăvara.
What does iarba mean?
Iarba is the definite form of the feminine noun iarbă, so it means “the grass.” In Romanian you form the definite article for feminine singular nouns by adding -a to the end.
Why is there an -a at the end of iarba?
Romanian marks the definite article on the noun itself. For feminine singular nouns ending in -ă, you replace -ă with -a (or simply add -a if the noun already ends in a consonant). So iarbă → iarba (“the grass”).
What is the function of the preposition din in din grădină?
Din means “from” or “of,” indicating origin or belonging. In iarba din grădină, it shows that the grass belongs to or comes from the garden.
Why use din grădină instead of în grădină?
- din grădină literally means “from the garden” or “of the garden,” emphasizing that the grass is part of that garden.
- în grădină means “in the garden” and is used when you want to say something is located there at a given moment (e.g., Plantele sunt în grădină – The plants are in the garden).
Why doesn’t grădină have its own definite article (i.e. grădina) after din?
When you use din in a generic sense (“from the garden” in general), the noun stays in its base (indefinite) form. You would only add the article if you meant “from the specific garden” already defined or modified (e.g., din grădina mea – “from my garden”).
Why is the adjective verde not verzi or some other form?
Verde ends in -e, which is the standard form for both masculine and feminine singular adjectives. Adjectives in Romanian agree in gender and number, but those ending in -e use the same form for M/F singular. The plural would be verzi.
What does primăvara mean, and why does it end in -a?
Primăvara is “the spring,” formed by adding the definite article -a to primăvară. When you use a season with its definite article, it often functions adverbially to mean “in the spring.”
Can you say în primăvară instead of primăvara?
Yes. Both mean “in the spring.”
- primăvara (article-attached noun) is a compact adverbial form.
- în primăvară uses the preposition în
- indefinite noun, which is equally correct.
Is the word order fixed, or could you start with Primăvara?
Romanian allows flexibility for emphasis. You could say:
Primăvara, iarba din grădină este verde.
This simply emphasizes when rather than what and is perfectly natural.
Can you use ’e instead of este in everyday speech?
Yes. In informal spoken Romanian, este often contracts to e or ’e:
Iarba din grădină e verde primăvara.
This is common and understood by all native speakers.