На пляже стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов, и мы выбрали два места у воды.

Breakdown of На пляже стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов, и мы выбрали два места у воды.

вода
the water
стоять
to stand
и
and
на
on
мы
we
у
by
длинный
long
два
two
выбрать
to choose
пляж
the beach
ряд
the row
шезлонг
the sun lounger
место
the spot

Questions & Answers about На пляже стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов, и мы выбрали два места у воды.

Why is it на пляже, not в пляже?

Russian uses на with пляж to mean on the beach / at the beach.

  • на пляже = on/at the beach
  • в is usually used for being inside something

So a beach is understood as an open surface/location, not an enclosed space, which is why на is the normal choice.

Also, пляже is in the prepositional case because it follows на in a location meaning:

  • пляжна пляже
Why is стоял singular if there were many deck chairs?

Because the grammatical subject is not шезлонгов but ряд.

The phrase is:

  • длинный ряд шезлонгов = a long row of deck chairs

The main noun is ряд (row), and ряд is masculine singular, so the verb agrees with it:

  • ряд стоял = the row stood / was positioned

Even though the row contains many deck chairs, the verb still matches ряд, not шезлонгов.

Why is it длинный ряд, not длинная ряд or длинное ряд?

Because ряд is a masculine noun.

So the adjective must also be masculine nominative singular:

  • длинный ряд = a long row

Compare:

  • длинная for feminine nouns
  • длинное for neuter nouns
  • длинный for masculine nouns
Why is шезлонгов in that form?

Because after ряд Russian normally uses the genitive plural:

  • ряд шезлонгов = a row of deck chairs

This is similar to English of deck chairs. Russian often expresses that relationship by putting the second noun into the genitive.

So:

  • dictionary form: шезлонг
  • genitive plural: шезлонгов
Why use стоял here? Does it literally mean stood?

Yes, literally стоял means stood, but in Russian verbs like стоять, лежать, and висеть are often used where English simply uses was / were.

So:

  • На пляже стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов
    literally: On the beach stood a long row of deck chairs
  • natural English: There was a long row of deck chairs on the beach

Russian likes to describe how something is positioned:

  • стоять = stand
  • лежать = lie
  • висеть = hang
Why is выбрали used instead of something like выбирали?

Выбрали is perfective past tense, which means the action is seen as completed.

Here the idea is:

  • we made the choice
  • the choice was finished

So мы выбрали два места means:

  • we chose two spots/seats

If you used выбирали instead, it would suggest an ongoing or repeated process:

  • we were choosing
  • we spent time choosing

In this sentence, the result matters, so выбрали is the natural choice.

Why is it два места, not два мест or две места?

There are two things happening here.

1. Why два, not две?

Because место is a neuter noun.

  • два is used with masculine and neuter nouns
  • две is used with feminine nouns

So:

  • два места = correct
  • две места = incorrect

2. Why места?

After the numbers 2, 3, 4, Russian usually uses the noun in a special form that looks like the genitive singular:

  • одно место
  • два места
  • три места
  • четыре места

So два места is exactly what you expect.

What does места mean here? Is it places or seats?

It can mean either, depending on context.

The basic meaning of место is place / spot / seat. In this sentence, since we are talking about deck chairs on a beach, два места у воды most naturally means:

  • two spots near the water
  • possibly two seats/sunbeds near the water

Russian often uses место in a broader way than English seat.

Why is it у воды? What case is воды?

У usually means by, near, next to, and it requires the genitive case.

So:

  • водаводы
  • у воды = by the water / near the water

On a beach, this means near the shoreline, not literally inside the water.

Why does вода become воды, but пляж becomes пляже?

Because they are in different cases after different prepositions.

на пляже

у воды

So the noun changes depending on the preposition and the grammatical role.

Could the sentence also have said был длинный ряд шезлонгов instead of стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов?

Yes, был is possible in some contexts, but стоял is more vivid and natural here.

Compare:

  • На пляже был длинный ряд шезлонгов
    = There was a long row of deck chairs on the beach
  • На пляже стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов
    = A long row of deck chairs stood on the beach

The second version gives a stronger visual sense of arrangement and physical presence. Russian often prefers these position verbs where English would simply say was.

Why is there a comma before и?

Because и is joining two separate clauses, each with its own subject/action:

  1. На пляже стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов
  2. мы выбрали два места у воды

In Russian, when и connects two full clauses, a comma is often used.

So the comma helps show that these are two linked statements:

  • first, what was there on the beach
  • second, what we did
Is the word order important here?

The word order is natural, but Russian word order is more flexible than English.

This sentence starts with the setting:

  • На пляже = On the beach

Then it introduces what was there:

  • стоял длинный ряд шезлонгов

Then it adds the next action:

  • и мы выбрали два места у воды

A different order is sometimes possible, but this version sounds smooth and descriptive. Russian often puts location first when setting the scene.

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