Breakdown of Clienta are puțini bani, așa că plătește în numerar.
Questions & Answers about Clienta are puțini bani, așa că plătește în numerar.
Why is it clienta and not clientă?
Clienta means the female customer / the client. In Romanian, the definite article is often attached to the end of the noun instead of being a separate word like the in English.
- clientă = a female customer / a client
- clienta = the female customer / the client
So clienta are puțini bani means the female customer has little money / not much money.
What does are mean, and what form is it?
Are means has. It is the 3rd person singular form of the verb a avea (to have).
Here is the present tense:
- eu am = I have
- tu ai = you have
- el/ea are = he/she has
So clienta are = the customer has.
Why is there no word for she before plătește?
Romanian often leaves out subject pronouns when the verb form already makes the subject clear. This is similar to Spanish or Italian.
In this sentence, the subject is clearly clienta, so Romanian naturally says:
- Clienta are puțini bani, așa că plătește în numerar.
You could say ea plătește, but it is usually only used for emphasis or contrast.
Why is it puțini bani and not puțin bani?
Because bani is a plural noun, the adjective/quantifier must agree with it.
- puțin = little / a little, used with singular or uncountable contexts
- puțini = few / not many, masculine plural
- puține = few / not many, feminine plural
Since bani is grammatically masculine plural, Romanian uses puțini:
- puțini bani = little money in the sense of not much money
Even though English uses singular money, Romanian often uses bani (money literally coins/money units) in the plural.
Why does Romanian use bani instead of a word exactly like English money?
Romanian has the noun ban / bani, which often means money in everyday use, even though it is grammatically plural here.
- am bani = I have money
- n-am bani = I don’t have money
There is also bani in the sense of actual money units, but in common speech it simply means money.
So puțini bani is a very natural way to say not much money.
What does așa că mean exactly?
Așa că means so, therefore, or that’s why. It introduces a consequence.
Structure:
- first clause: the situation
- așa că
- second clause: the result
In this sentence:
- Clienta are puțini bani = the customer has little money
- așa că plătește în numerar = so she pays in cash
It is a very common connector in Romanian.
What is the verb form plătește?
Plătește means pays. It is the 3rd person singular present tense of a plăti (to pay).
Examples:
- eu plătesc = I pay
- tu plătești = you pay
- el/ea plătește = he/she pays
So here:
- plătește = she pays
Why is it în numerar for in cash?
În numerar is the standard Romanian expression for in cash / with cash.
- numerar = cash
- în numerar = in cash
Romanian uses the preposition în here as part of a fixed expression. Even though English says in cash, this is not always something you can translate word-for-word from English, but in this case the expressions happen to be very close.
Common payment expressions:
- a plăti în numerar = to pay in cash
- a plăti cu cardul = to pay by card
Could this sentence also use cu bani cash or cu numerar?
You might be understood, but în numerar is the normal, idiomatic expression.
Best choices:
- plătește în numerar = she pays in cash
- plătește cash = also heard in modern informal speech, influenced by English
Less natural:
- plătește cu numerar
- plătește cu bani cash
A learner should remember în numerar as the safest standard phrase.
Why is the adjective before bani? Can Romanian put it after the noun?
In Romanian, words like puțin / puțini / puține normally come before the noun.
- puțini bani = little money / few money units
This is different from many descriptive adjectives, which often come after the noun:
- clientă fidelă = loyal customer
So with quantity words, the position before the noun is normal.
How do you pronounce the special Romanian letters in this sentence?
The special letters here are:
- ț in puțini and plătește: pronounced like ts in cats
- ă in așa: a short neutral vowel, like a relaxed uh
- ș in așa and plătește: pronounced like sh
- â does not appear here, but learners often confuse it with ă; they are different sounds
Rough pronunciation guide:
- Clienta ≈ klee-YEN-ta
- are ≈ AH-re
- puțini ≈ poo-TSI-nee
- bani ≈ BAHN-ee
- așa că ≈ a-SHA kuh
- plătește ≈ pluh-TEHSH-te
- în numerar ≈ uhn noo-me-RAR
Is clienta specifically female? What if I want to say the customer without specifying female?
Yes, clienta is specifically female.
- clienta = the female customer / the female client
- clientul = the male customer / the customer (masculine form)
Romanian nouns usually have grammatical gender, so you often have to choose masculine or feminine.
If the customer is male:
If you want to stay more neutral in some contexts, Romanian may still require a gendered noun depending on the word you choose.
Is the comma before așa că necessary?
Yes, the comma is normal and expected here because the sentence has two clauses linked by așa că.
The comma helps show the pause and the cause-result relationship. In standard writing, this punctuation is correct.
Could the sentence be reordered in Romanian?
Yes, Romanian allows some flexibility, but the original order is the most natural and clear.
Standard:
Possible alternatives:
- Așa că plătește în numerar, clienta are puțini bani. — unnatural in most contexts
- Plătește în numerar, pentru că are puțini bani. — natural, but it changes the structure to because
- Pentru că are puțini bani, clienta plătește în numerar. — also natural
So the original sentence is a very good everyday model.
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