Мой друг читает письмо.

Breakdown of Мой друг читает письмо.

друг
the friend
мой
my
читать
to read
письмо
the letter
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Russian grammar and vocabulary.

Start learning Russian now

Questions & Answers about Мой друг читает письмо.

What does Мой mean in this sentence, and why is it used instead of моя or моё?
Мой means “my” in English. Russian possessive adjectives must agree in gender, number, and case with the noun they modify. Since друг (friend) is a masculine singular noun, the masculine form мой is the proper choice. If you were referring to a feminine noun (for example, подруга for a female friend), you would use моя.
What role does читает play in this sentence?
Читает is the third person singular present tense form of the verb читать, which means “to read.” It indicates that the subject, Мой друг, is performing the action of reading. This form corresponds to he, she, or it in English.
Why is письмо unchanged in form even though it serves as the object of the sentence?
Письмо is a neuter noun. In Russian, inanimate neuter nouns have the same form in both the nominative and accusative cases. Since письмо is inanimate, its form does not change when it functions as the direct object of the sentence.
How is the word order structured, and is it fixed in Russian like in English?
The sentence follows a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) order: Мой друг (subject) + читает (verb) + письмо (object). Although this is the standard word order in simple declarative Russian sentences, Russian syntax is quite flexible. Elements can be rearranged for emphasis or stylistic reasons, but the basic meaning is maintained through noun cases and verb conjugations.
Does the present tense in читает indicate that the action is happening right now, or can it also express habitual actions?
In Russian, the present tense can denote both a currently ongoing action and a habitual or general action. Without additional context, читает might be interpreted as either “is reading” (right now) or “reads” in a regular or habitual sense. Context usually clarifies which meaning is intended.