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Questions & Answers about El olor a café es fuerte.
In Spanish, olor a + noun is the normal pattern for smell of / smell like something.
So:
- el olor a café = the smell of coffee
- olor a humo = smell of smoke
- olor a flores = smell of flowers
English learners often expect de because English says of, but with olor, Spanish usually uses a.
It means the smell of coffee or a coffee smell, depending on context.
Literally, it is:
- el olor = the smell
- a café = of coffee / like coffee
So the whole phrase refers to the scent that coffee has, not to coffee itself.
Because olor is a masculine noun in Spanish.
That is why it uses:
- el olor
- un olor
- el olor fuerte
Even though some Spanish nouns ending in consonants can be hard to guess by gender, olor is simply masculine and must be memorized that way.
Es is used because fuerte here describes a characteristic or quality of the smell.
- El olor a café es fuerte = The smell of coffee is strong
In Spanish, ser often describes what something is like in a more general sense, while estar often describes a temporary state or condition.
With smells, using es fuerte sounds natural when you are describing the intensity of the smell.
In Spanish, adjectives usually come after the noun.
So:
- el olor ... fuerte
- el café caliente
- la casa grande
In this sentence, fuerte comes after es because it is a predicate adjective describing el olor a café.
Structure:
- El olor a café = subject
- es = verb
- fuerte = adjective
Fuerte has the same form for both masculine and feminine singular nouns.
So you get:
- el olor es fuerte
- la música es fuerte
It only changes in the plural:
- los olores son fuertes
- las voces son fuertes
So in this sentence, fuerte stays fuerte because the subject is singular.
Yes, but it is not exactly the same structure.
- El olor a café es fuerte = The smell of coffee is strong
- El café huele fuerte = The coffee smells strong
Both are natural, but they focus on different things:
- El olor a café focuses on the smell
- El café focuses on the coffee itself
So both can work, depending on what you want to emphasize.
Yes. Fuerte can mean different things depending on context, such as:
- strong
- loud
- intense
- powerful
In this sentence, with a smell, fuerte means strong or intense.
So El olor a café es fuerte means the coffee smell is noticeable or intense.
Because in Spanish, the phrase olor a café does not normally need an article before café.
It is talking about the type of smell, not a specific coffee.
Compare:
- olor a café = smell of coffee
- olor a pan = smell of bread
If you added an article, it would usually sound more specific or less natural in a simple sentence like this.
You would change the noun, article, verb, and adjective as needed:
- Los olores a café son fuertes.
Breakdown:
- el → los
- olor → olores
- es → son
- fuerte → fuertes
Café stays the same here because it is being used as the thing the smell is of.
No.
- olor is a noun: smell
- oloroso / olorosa is an adjective that can mean fragrant or having a smell, depending on context
So in this sentence:
- El olor a café es fuerte uses olor as the noun
You would not replace olor with oloroso here because they are different parts of speech.
Café is pronounced roughly kah-FEH, with the stress on the last syllable.
The accent mark on é shows that the stress goes there:
- ca-FÉ
That written accent is important, because without it, the word would not follow normal Spanish stress rules.