Этот соус слишком острый, поэтому сын ест макароны без соуса.

Breakdown of Этот соус слишком острый, поэтому сын ест макароны без соуса.

есть
to eat
этот
this
без
without
поэтому
so
слишком
too
сын
the son
острый
spicy
соус
the sauce
макароны
the pasta
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Questions & Answers about Этот соус слишком острый, поэтому сын ест макароны без соуса.

Why is it этот соус and not это соус?

Because соус is a masculine singular noun in the nominative case, and the word for this has to agree with it.

  • masculine: этот
  • feminine: эта
  • neuter: это
  • plural: эти

So этот соус means this sauce.

A common source of confusion is that это can also mean this is in sentences like Это соус = This is sauce / This is a sauce. But when this directly modifies a noun, you use the agreeing form: этот соус.

Why does острый end in -ый?

Because острый is an adjective describing соус, so it must agree with соус in gender, number, and case.

Here, соус is:

  • masculine
  • singular
  • nominative

So the adjective is also masculine singular nominative: острый.

Compare:

  • острый соус — spicy sauce
  • острая еда — spicy food
  • острое блюдо — spicy dish
  • острые блюда — spicy dishes
Where is the word is? Why doesn’t Russian say соус is too spicy?

In Russian, the verb to be is usually omitted in the present tense.

So:

  • Этот соус слишком острый literally looks like This sauce too spicy
  • but it means This sauce is too spicy

This is completely normal in Russian. In the past or future, forms of to be do appear:

  • Этот соус был слишком острый — This sauce was too spicy
  • Этот соус будет слишком острый — This sauce will be too spicy
What does слишком mean, and how is it different from очень?

Слишком means too, in the sense of more than is good/acceptable/comfortable.

So:

  • слишком острый = too spicy
  • очень острый = very spicy

That difference matters:

  • очень just increases intensity
  • слишком suggests a problem or excess

In this sentence, the sauce is not just spicy — it is more spicy than the son can comfortably eat.

Why is there a comma before поэтому?

Because поэтому here connects two clauses:

  • Этот соус слишком острый
  • поэтому сын ест макароны без соуса

In standard Russian punctuation, when two clauses are joined like this, a comma is normally used before поэтому.

Here поэтому means therefore, so, or that’s why.

What exactly does поэтому mean? Is it the same as потому что?

No, they are related but not the same.

  • поэтому = therefore / so / that’s why
  • потому что = because

Your sentence uses поэтому to show a result:

  • The sauce is too spicy, so the son eats pasta without sauce.

If you rewrote it with потому что, the structure would change:

  • Сын ест макароны без соуса, потому что этот соус слишком острый.
  • The son eats pasta without sauce because this sauce is too spicy.

So:

  • поэтому introduces the result
  • потому что introduces the reason
Why is it just сын and not the son or his son?

Russian has no articles like a or the.

So сын can mean different things depending on context:

  • a son
  • the son
  • his son
  • my son

In many real contexts, a bare noun is enough because the listener already knows who is being talked about.

If Russian wants to be more specific, it can add a possessive:

  • его сын — his son
  • мой сын — my son

But in this sentence, сын by itself is natural.

Why is макароны plural? Isn’t pasta singular in English?

In Russian, макароны is a plural-only noun in normal usage. This is very common for words referring to things made of many pieces or treated as a set.

So even when English uses singular pasta, Russian often uses plural макароны.

Examples:

  • Я люблю макароны. — I like pasta.
  • Он ест макароны. — He is eating pasta.

This does not make the verb plural here, because макароны is the object, not the subject. The subject is сын, so the verb is singular: ест.

Why does соус become соуса after без?

Because the preposition без always takes the genitive case.

So:

  • dictionary form / nominative: соус
  • after без: без соуса

This is a very important pattern in Russian:

  • без сахара — without sugar
  • без воды — without water
  • без соуса — without sauce

For a masculine inanimate noun like соус, the genitive singular often ends in .

Why is the verb ест and not some other form?

Ест is the 3rd person singular present tense of есть = to eat.

It matches the subject сын:

  • я ем — I eat
  • ты ешь — you eat
  • он / она ест — he/she eats
  • мы едим — we eat
  • вы едите — you eat
  • они едят — they eat

So сын ест means the son eats / is eating.

Russian present tense can describe either:

  • a general fact or habit
  • what is happening now

The exact meaning depends on context.

Why is the verb есть imperfective here?

Because the sentence describes the action in a general, ordinary way, not as a single completed event.

The imperfective verb есть is the normal choice for:

  • habits
  • ongoing action
  • repeated action
  • simple description of what someone eats

A perfective verb would focus on completion and usually would not have a true present-tense meaning. So here ест is exactly what you would expect.

Can the word order be changed, or is this order fixed?

Russian word order is more flexible than English, because the cases show how words relate to each other. The sentence as given is a neutral, natural order.

  • Этот соус слишком острый, поэтому сын ест макароны без соуса.

But other orders are possible for emphasis, for example:

  • Сын поэтому ест макароны без соуса.
  • Макароны сын ест без соуса.

Those alternatives can sound more marked or emphasize a particular word. For a learner, the original order is the safest and most natural one to use.

Does острый only mean spicy here? I thought it meant sharp.

Yes, острый can mean both sharp and spicy. It is a very common Russian adjective with several related meanings.

Depending on context, it can mean:

  • sharpострый нож = a sharp knife
  • spicy / hotострый соус = spicy sauce
  • sometimes also acute, intense, or pointed

So in food contexts, острый usually means spicy rather than sharp.