У меня есть десять яблок.

Breakdown of У меня есть десять яблок.

я
I
яблоко
the apple
десять
ten
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Questions & Answers about У меня есть десять яблок.

Why does the sentence use У меня есть десять яблок instead of Я имею десять яблок to say “I have ten apples”?
In Russian, simple possession in the present tense is normally expressed with the construction у + genitive pronoun plus the existential verb есть. Literally it means “there is … at me.” The verb иметь (“to have”) exists but is rare and sounds bookish or formal in everyday speech.
What case is меня in, and why isn’t it мне?
Меня is the genitive form of я. The preposition у always requires the genitive case to mark the possessor. Мне is dative and is used with other verbs (e.g., давать мне “to give me”), but never with у.
Which cases do десять and яблок take here?

In У меня есть десять яблок, the numeral десять is in the nominative case (it functions as the grammatical subject of есть), while яблок is in the genitive plural. Russian numerals affect the noun’s case:

  • After 1: noun in nominative singular (e.g., одно яблоко).
  • After 2–4: noun in genitive singular (e.g., два яблока, три яблока, четыре яблока).
  • After 5 and above: noun in genitive plural (e.g., пять яблок, десять яблок).
How would I say “I have two apples” instead?
You would say У меня есть два яблока. Note that два triggers genitive singular of яблоко, which is яблока.
Can I omit есть in this sentence?

Yes. In the present tense you can drop есть and still express possession:

  • У меня десять яблок. The meaning remains “I have ten apples,” because у + genitive by itself implies possession in the present.
Is the word order in У меня есть десять яблок fixed?

It’s relatively flexible for emphasis, though the neutral order is У + genitive + есть + [quantity + noun]. Variations include:

  • Десять яблок у меня есть (emphasizes “ten apples”)
  • У меня десять яблок есть (less common—stresses “I do have ten apples”)
How do I know есть here means “there is/have” and not “eat”?

Context and structure make it clear:

  • The existential есть appears after у + genitive and before a noun phrase, indicating “there is/have.”
  • The eating verb есть takes a direct object and occurs in different constructions (e.g., я ем яблоко “I am eating an apple”).
  • In У меня есть…, you’re counting or stating possession, not describing an action of eating.