Questions & Answers about Сегодня первое число.
Because первое agrees with the noun число, which is neuter (оно). In Russian, ordinal numbers behave like adjectives and must match the noun in gender, number, and case:
- первое число (neuter)
- первый день (masculine)
- первая неделя (feminine)
Yes, literally число = number, but in everyday Russian число also means the calendar date (day of the month).
So Сегодня первое число means “Today is the first (of the month).”
In the present tense Russian usually omits the verb to be (есть).
So Сегодня первое число is essentially “Today (is) the first date.”
You can say Сегодня есть первое число, but it sounds unnatural in normal conversation.
They are in the nominative because this is a simple naming/identifying pattern:
Сегодня + (noun phrase naming what “today” is)
So: первое число = nominative predicate phrase.
Yes, very commonly. Сегодня первое is natural because число is easily understood from context (especially when talking about dates).
You’ll also hear answers like:
- Первое.
- Первое марта. (if the month is relevant)
A very common pattern is:
- Сегодня первое марта.
Here первое stays nominative neuter, and the month is usually in the genitive: марта, апреля, мая, etc.
Most commonly:
- Какое сегодня число? = “What’s the date today?” (literally: “Which date is it today?”)
And you can answer:
- Сегодня первое (число).
- Первое марта.
The neutral, most common order is Сегодня первое число.
But Russian word order is flexible:
- Первое число сегодня can work, but it sounds more like emphasis (“It’s the first today…”), and is less neutral.
- Сегодня первое число is what you’d normally say.
Dates in Russian normally use ordinal numbers (first, second, third…), not cardinal numbers (one, two, three…).
So you say первое (число), второе, третье, etc., not один in this context.
A rough pronunciation guide:
- Сегодня ≈ sye-VOD-nya (stress on -вод-)
- первое ≈ PER-va-ye (two syllables after пер-)
- число ≈ chi-SLO (stress on -сло)