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Questions & Answers about Довольный гость улыбается.
What part of speech is Довольный, and why does it look the way it does?
Довольный is an adjective in the nominative singular masculine form. In Russian, adjectives agree in gender, number, and case with the noun they modify—in this case гость. So because гость is masculine, singular, and the subject of the sentence, its adjective also appears as Довольный.
Why is гость in the nominative case?
The nominative case marks the subject of a sentence—the person or thing performing the action. Here, гость (“guest”) is who is doing the smiling, so it stands in the nominative.
What does the suffix -ся in улыбается indicate?
The suffix -ся makes улыбаться a reflexive verb. It doesn’t mean “he smiles to himself,” but is simply how Russian verbs like “to smile” are formed. Many intransitive verbs in Russian use -ся even if the action isn’t reflexive in the English sense.
Why is улыбается in the third person singular?
Because the subject гость is third person singular, the verb must match:
я улыбаюсь (I smile)
ты улыбаешься (you smile)
он/она улыбается (he/she smiles)
Here он улыбается corresponds to “the guest smiles.”
Why is there no article (“a” or “the”) before довольный гость?
Russian has no definite or indefinite articles. Context and word order convey whether you mean “a guest” or “the guest.” In isolation, Довольный гость can mean either “A satisfied guest” or “The satisfied guest,” depending on what you’ve already said.
Could I say Гость довольный улыбается instead? How rigid is word order?
Russian word order is more flexible than in English, but the most neutral style puts adjectives before nouns and subjects before verbs: Довольный гость улыбается. If you shift to Гость довольный улыбается, it sounds poetic or emphatic (highlighting “гость” or “довольный”). It’s correct but changes the nuance.
What’s the stress pattern for довольный and гость?
Stress in довольный falls on the second о: довОльный.
In гость, the single vowel о is stressed: гость.
Why use довольный instead of счастливый or рад?
Each word has a slightly different nuance:
- дОвольный focuses on being “satisfied” or “pleased” with something.
- считливый means “happy” in an emotional, broad sense.
- рад means “glad” but is used with dative objects (e.g., я рад тебе “I’m glad to see you”). Here, дОвольный гОсть implies the guest is content with what he received or experienced.
What aspect is улыбаться, and is there a perfective counterpart?
улыбаться is imperfective; it describes a general or ongoing action (“to smile”). The perfective counterpart is улыбнуться (“to give a smile once”). You would say гость улыбнулся to indicate the guest smiled (one specific smile), not that he is smiling continuously.
Can I use удовлетворённый instead of довольный?
Though both can mean “satisfied,” удовлетворённый is a participle (from удовлетворить) and often sounds more formal or technical (“satisfied requirements,” “satisfied customer”). довольный is the everyday adjective you’d use for a guest being pleased or content.