Breakdown of Сегодня она сделала ровный пробор, заплела косу и сказала, что так ей удобнее работать.
Questions & Answers about Сегодня она сделала ровный пробор, заплела косу и сказала, что так ей удобнее работать.
Why do сделала, заплела, and сказала all end in -ла?
Because Russian past-tense verbs agree with the subject in gender and number.
The subject here is она, so the verbs are feminine singular:
- сделала
- заплела
- сказала
Compare:
- он сделал — he did/made
- она сделала — she did/made
- они сделали — they did/made
So the -ла ending is a very common sign of a feminine singular past-tense verb.
Why are the verbs сделала and заплела perfective, not imperfective?
They are perfective because the sentence describes completed actions:
- she made a parting
- she braided her hair
- she said something
Perfective verbs are very common when Russian tells a sequence of finished events.
Here:
- сделала = completed the action of making the parting
- заплела = completed the action of braiding
- сказала = completed the action of saying
If you used imperfective forms such as делала or заплетала, the focus would shift more toward the process, repetition, or background activity, not the finished result.
What does пробор mean here?
Пробор is the parting in someone’s hair — the line where the hair is divided.
So сделала пробор literally means made a parting, which corresponds to English parted her hair or made a part in her hair.
This is a normal Russian way to say it.
What does ровный mean in ровный пробор?
Here ровный means something like:
- straight
- even
- neat
So ровный пробор is a straight/neat parting.
In hair-related contexts, ровный often suggests that the line is clean and tidy, not messy or uneven.
Why is it ровный пробор, but косу instead of коса?
This is about the accusative case, which is used for direct objects.
Both пробор and коса are direct objects here:
- сделала ровный пробор
- заплела косу
But they behave differently because of their gender and type:
1. Masculine inanimate nouns
For masculine inanimate nouns, the accusative usually looks the same as the nominative:
- nominative: ровный пробор
- accusative: ровный пробор
So there is no visible change.
2. Feminine nouns in -а
For many feminine nouns, the accusative changes -а to -у:
- nominative: коса
- accusative: косу
So заплела косу means braided a braid/plait.
Does коса really mean braid here? I thought it could mean something else.
Yes, here коса means braid or plait.
Russian коса can have more than one meaning, including:
- braid/plait
- scythe
- sometimes sandspit in geography
But in this sentence, because of the hair context (пробор, работать with hair arranged conveniently), it clearly means a braid.
So заплела косу = braided her hair into a braid.
Why isn’t она repeated before заплела and сказала?
Because the subject is already clear.
Russian often avoids repeating the subject when several actions are done by the same person:
- Сегодня она сделала ровный пробор, заплела косу и сказала...
This is very natural. English often does the same:
- Today she made a straight parting, braided her hair, and said...
Repeating она before every verb would usually sound unnecessary unless you wanted special emphasis.
Why is there a comma after пробор and another comma before что?
They are there for two different reasons.
Comma after пробор
This separates items in a series of actions:
- сделала ровный пробор
- заплела косу
- и сказала
So the sentence lists what she did.
Comma before что
This introduces a subordinate clause:
- сказала, что... = said that...
Russian normally puts a comma before что in this structure.
What does так mean in что так ей удобнее работать?
Here так means this way or like this.
It refers back to the hairstyle she just made:
- with her hair parted like this
- with her hair braided like this
- in this arrangement
So the idea is:
- she said that it is more convenient for her to work this way
Why is it ей удобнее работать and not она удобнее работает?
Because Russian uses a different structure here.
ей удобнее работать
Literally, this is close to:
- to her, it is more convenient to work
- it is more convenient for her to work
This is a very common Russian pattern:
- мне трудно понять — it is hard for me to understand
- ему легче читать — it is easier for him to read
- ей удобно сидеть — it is comfortable for her to sit
The person experiencing the feeling or condition is often put in the dative case:
- ей = to/for her
And the action itself appears as an infinitive:
- работать = to work
So ей удобнее работать is the normal way to say it’s more convenient for her to work.
By contrast, она удобнее работает would mean something more like she works more conveniently, which is not the intended idea.
Why is it удобнее instead of just удобно?
Удобнее is the comparative form, meaning more convenient.
So the sentence implies a comparison, even if the other option is not stated directly. The unstated meaning is something like:
- more convenient than wearing her hair differently
- more convenient than leaving it loose
- more convenient than before
If the sentence used удобно, it would simply mean:
- it is convenient for her to work this way
But удобнее adds the idea of comparison: this way is better/more convenient.
Why is the word order так ей удобнее работать? Could it also be ей так удобнее работать?
Yes, ей так удобнее работать is also possible.
Russian word order is flexible, and changing the order often changes emphasis, not the basic meaning.
так ей удобнее работать
This puts a little more focus on так — this way
ей так удобнее работать
This sounds slightly more neutral and straightforward
In both cases, the meaning is essentially:
- it’s more convenient for her to work this way
So the original word order is natural; it just highlights this way a bit more.
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