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Questions & Answers about Я хочу сесть на стул.
Why is сесть used here instead of сидеть?
Because сесть is a perfective verb meaning “to sit down” (the moment you take a seat), whereas сидеть is imperfective and means “to sit” or “to be sitting” (the state of remaining in a chair). In this sentence you express the action of sitting down, so you use сесть.
What’s the difference between сесть and садиться?
They form a perfective–imperfective pair:
- садиться (imperfective) describes the ongoing or repeated process of sitting down (“I am sitting down,” “I used to sit down there”).
- сесть (perfective) denotes the completed action of taking a seat (“to sit down once,” “to have sat down”).
What’s the difference between сесть and посидеть?
Both are perfective, but they focus on different aspects:
- сесть = to take a seat (the single act of sitting down).
- посидеть = to sit for a while (to spend some time in a seated position).
Why is the preposition на used with стул, and why is стул in the accusative case?
When expressing motion onto a surface or object in Russian, you use на + Accusative (answers the question куда? – “where to?”). A chair is treated as a surface you sit on, so you say на стул. Since стул is inanimate masculine, its accusative form looks exactly like its nominative: стул.
Why are there no articles (“a” or “the”) before стул, and how do you know which one it is?
Russian does not have articles. Whether стул means “a chair” or “the chair” is inferred from context. If you need to specify “this chair,” you can say на этом стуле, or “some chair” remains just на стуле.
Why does хотеть use an infinitive directly, and why isn’t there a word for “to” before сесть?
In Russian, verbs of desire, ability, obligation (e.g., хотеть, мочь, нужно) are directly followed by another verb in the infinitive. There is no separate particle for “to.” So Я хочу сесть literally means “I want sit-down.”
Is there a present tense of сесть, and how do you form other tenses?
Perfective verbs like сесть have no present tense—present would imply an ongoing action, which contradicts perfective meaning. Instead you use:
- Future: я сяду, ты сядешь, он сядет, …
- Past: он сел, она села, они сели.
Can you omit на стул and just say Я хочу сесть?
Yes. Я хочу сесть alone means “I want to sit down.” If the context already makes clear what you’ll sit on (e.g., there’s only one chair in view), you don’t have to mention на стул.