В дороге мне хочется послушать тихую музыку в наушниках.

Breakdown of В дороге мне хочется послушать тихую музыку в наушниках.

я
I
в
in
музыка
the music
тихий
quiet
хотеться
to feel like
наушники
the headphones
послушать
to listen
в дороге
on the go
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Russian grammar and vocabulary.

Start learning Russian now

Questions & Answers about В дороге мне хочется послушать тихую музыку в наушниках.

What does В дороге mean here?

В дороге means while traveling, on the road, or during a journey.

It does not usually mean literally in the road. It is an idiomatic expression used for being somewhere on the way, traveling from one place to another.

So in this sentence, В дороге sets the situation: when I’m traveling.

Why is it в дороге, not по дороге?

Both can relate to travel, but they are not identical.

  • в дороге = during the trip / while traveling
  • по дороге = on the way or along the road

In this sentence, в дороге is better because the idea is when I am traveling, I feel like listening...

Compare:

  • В дороге мне хочется спать. = I feel sleepy when traveling.
  • По дороге домой я купил хлеб. = On the way home, I bought bread.

So в дороге focuses on the state or period of travel, not the route itself.

Why is it мне хочется, not я хочу?

Мне хочется is a very common Russian way to say I feel like... or I want to...

It is a bit softer and more spontaneous than я хочу.

  • Я хочу послушать музыку. = I want to listen to music.
    This sounds more direct and straightforward.
  • Мне хочется послушать музыку. = I feel like listening to music.
    This sounds more like a personal urge or mood.

So here мне хочется fits well because the sentence describes a feeling that comes up during travel.

What case is мне, and why is it used?

Мне is the dative case of я.

Russian often uses the dative with impersonal expressions of feeling, desire, necessity, and so on. In this structure, the person experiencing the feeling is put in the dative:

  • мне хочется = I feel like
  • мне нравится = I like
  • мне нужно = I need

So мне literally means to me, but in natural English we translate it as I.

Why is it хочется and not хочу?

Хочется comes from хотеться, which is an impersonal verb meaning something like to feel like or to have a desire to.

That is why the sentence uses:

  • мне хочется = I feel like

rather than:

  • я хочу = I want

Also, хочется is in the 3rd person singular neuter-style impersonal form, because the construction is impersonal. There is no normal grammatical subject like я here.

The -ся is part of this verb form and is common in Russian impersonal expressions.

Why is the verb послушать used instead of слушать?

This is about aspect.

  • слушать = imperfective
  • послушать = perfective

Here послушать suggests to listen for a while, to have a listen, or to listen as a single complete action.

That works well with мне хочется, because the speaker means something like:

I feel like listening to some quiet music for a bit.

If you said слушать, the meaning would be more about the process itself, without the same sense of a bounded action.

Both can be possible in some contexts, but послушать sounds very natural here.

Why is it тихую музыку, not тихая музыка?

Because музыку is the direct object of послушать, so it must be in the accusative case.

Base form:

  • тихая музыка = quiet music

Accusative form:

  • тихую музыку

Since музыка is feminine singular, the endings change like this:

  • тихаятихую
  • музыкамузыку

So:

  • послушать тихую музыку = to listen to quiet music
What does тихую mean here exactly?

Тихую here means quiet, soft, or possibly gentle, depending on context.

With музыка, тихая музыка often means:

  • music that is not loud
  • soft, calm, gentle music

In this sentence, the idea is probably quiet/soft music in headphones while traveling.

So it does not necessarily mean the speaker will play the music at low volume only; it can also describe the kind of music itself.

Why is it в наушниках? Why plural?

Because наушники is normally a plural noun in Russian, just like headphones in English.

So the dictionary form is:

  • наушники = headphones

Russian usually treats them as a pair, not as a singular item.

That is why you get:

  • в наушниках = in headphones / wearing headphones

There is a singular word наушник, but that usually means an earpiece or one earbud, not the full pair.

What case is в наушниках, and why?

It is the prepositional case.

The preposition в can take different cases depending on meaning:

  • в
    • accusative = motion into something
  • в
    • prepositional = location or state

Here there is no movement. The meaning is in headphones / while wearing headphones, so Russian uses the prepositional:

  • в наушниках

Since наушники is plural, the prepositional plural ending is -ах.

Is there an implied subject in this sentence?

Yes. The person involved is I, but Russian does not express it with я here.

Instead, the sentence uses the impersonal construction:

  • мне хочется...

So the experiencer is understood from мне.

A more literal breakdown would be something like:

  • During the trip, to me it feels-like listening to quiet music in headphones.

That literal version is awkward in English, but it helps explain the Russian grammar.

Can the word order be changed?

Yes. Russian word order is fairly flexible, and changing it usually changes emphasis, not the basic meaning.

The original sentence:

  • В дороге мне хочется послушать тихую музыку в наушниках.

puts В дороге first, so the travel situation is highlighted.

Other possible orders include:

  • Мне хочется послушать тихую музыку в наушниках в дороге.
  • Тихую музыку в наушниках мне хочется послушать в дороге.

These are grammatically possible, but the original sounds natural and balanced.

So the current order is a good standard way to say it.