Breakdown of После неудачной пересдачи ему пришлось ещё неделю готовиться к зачёту.
Questions & Answers about После неудачной пересдачи ему пришлось ещё неделю готовиться к зачёту.
Why is пересдачи in the form пересдачи? What case is it?
It is in the genitive case because it follows после.
- после = after
- после always takes the genitive
- so:
- пересдача → nominative
- после пересдачи → genitive
So После неудачной пересдачи means After the unsuccessful retake.
Why is неудачной also in that form?
Because adjectives must agree with the noun they describe in gender, number, and case.
Here the noun is:
- пересдача — feminine singular
- after после, it becomes genitive singular: пересдачи
So the adjective must match:
- неудачная пересдача — nominative
- после неудачной пересдачи — genitive
That is why you get неудачной.
What exactly does пересдача mean?
Пересдача means a retake, usually of an exam, test, or other academic assessment.
It comes from the verb пересдавать / пересдать, meaning to retake.
So:
- сдача экзамена = taking/passing an exam
- пересдача экзамена = retaking an exam
In this sentence, it refers to a failed attempt at a retake.
Why is it ему пришлось, not он пришлось or он должен был?
Ему пришлось is a very common Russian way to say he had to.
The verb прийтись / приходиться is used in an impersonal construction:
- мне пришлось = I had to
- ему пришлось = he had to
- нам пришлось = we had to
The person experiencing the necessity goes in the dative case, so:
- он → nominative
- ему → dative
This construction is slightly different from он должен был:
- ему пришлось = he ended up having to / he was forced by circumstances to
- он должен был = he was supposed to / was obliged to
So ему пришлось often sounds more like a practical necessity caused by the situation.
What does пришлось mean literally, and why is it past tense?
Пришлось is the past tense form of прийтись.
In this sentence it means something like:
- it turned out necessary
- he had to
Because the sentence describes a completed situation in the past, Russian uses the past tense:
- ему приходится = he has to / he is having to
- ему пришлось = he had to
The infinitive that follows tells you what he had to do:
- ему пришлось готовиться = he had to prepare
What does ещё mean here?
Here ещё means another or an additional.
So:
- ещё неделю = for another week
This does not mean still here, even though ещё can sometimes mean that in other contexts.
Compare:
- ещё неделю = another week
- он ещё дома = he is still at home
Context tells you which meaning is intended.
Why is it неделю without a preposition? What case is that?
Неделю is in the accusative case, and here it expresses duration of time.
Russian often uses the accusative without a preposition to show how long something lasted:
- ждать час = to wait for an hour
- работать весь день = to work all day
- готовиться неделю = to prepare for a week
So:
- ещё неделю готовиться = to keep preparing for another week
This is a very common pattern.
Why is the verb готовиться, not готовить?
Because готовиться means to prepare oneself / to prepare for something, especially in the sense of studying or getting ready.
Compare:
- готовить = to prepare something, often food; also to prepare someone/something
- готовиться = to get ready, to prepare oneself
Examples:
- готовить ужин = to cook dinner
- готовиться к экзамену = to prepare for an exam
In your sentence, the person is doing the preparation himself, so готовиться is the natural choice.
Why is it к зачёту? What case does к require?
The preposition к requires the dative case.
The standard expression is:
- готовиться к чему? = to prepare for what?
So:
- зачёт → nominative
- к зачёту → dative
This is just the normal pattern for this verb:
- готовиться к экзамену
- готовиться к уроку
- готовиться к зачёту
What is a зачёт? Is it the same as an экзамен?
Not exactly.
A зачёт is a kind of academic assessment in Russian-speaking educational systems, often closer to a pass/fail credit than a full graded exam.
Very roughly:
- экзамен = an exam, often graded
- зачёт = a pass/fail assessment, course credit check, or qualifying test
In practice, learners often translate зачёт simply as test or course credit assessment, depending on context.
So готовиться к зачёту means preparing for that kind of academic requirement.
Why does the sentence begin with После неудачной пересдачи? Is that just word order?
Yes. Russian word order is flexible, and the sentence starts with the time/background frame:
- После неудачной пересдачи = after the unsuccessful retake
Then it gives the main result:
- ему пришлось ещё неделю готовиться к зачёту
This order is natural because it sets up the situation first and then tells you what happened because of it.
You could also say:
- Ему пришлось ещё неделю готовиться к зачёту после неудачной пересдачи.
That is also grammatical, but it may sound a little less smooth depending on context. The original version is very natural.
Is неудачной пересдачи saying that the retake itself was unsuccessful, or that he retook because of a previous failure?
It means the retake was unsuccessful.
So the sequence is:
- there was a retake
- that retake went badly / was failed
- because of that, he had to prepare for another week
If Russian wanted to say the retake of a previously failed exam, it would usually be phrased differently and more explicitly.
Here, неудачной directly describes пересдачи, so the most natural reading is an unsuccessful retake.
Could ещё неделю be replaced with ещё на неделю?
Not in the same way.
- ещё неделю готовиться = to prepare for another week / for one more week
- this expresses duration
- ещё на неделю often suggests for an additional week ahead, frequently with a different structure or emphasis
For pure duration after a verb like готовиться, bare accusative is the normal and simplest choice:
- готовиться ещё неделю
So the sentence as written is the most natural standard form.
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