A1

Negation with Nu in Romanian

Negația cu Nu

Overview

Negation in Romanian is straightforward and consistent: the particle nu is placed directly before the verb to make any sentence negative. This simple rule applies across all tenses, moods, and verb types, making it one of the easiest grammatical concepts for A1 learners to master.

What makes Romanian negation particularly interesting — and different from English — is that double negation is not only grammatically correct but required. While English treats double negatives as canceling each other out ("I don't have nothing" technically means "I have something"), Romanian uses double and even triple negatives as the standard way to express a negative idea. Saying Nu am nimic (literally "I don't have nothing") is correct Romanian and means "I don't have anything."

This feature aligns Romanian with other Romance languages (French ne...rien, Spanish no...nada) and reflects a broader pattern in the language family. Once you accept that multiple negatives reinforce rather than cancel, Romanian negation becomes entirely predictable.

How It Works

Basic Negation

Place nu immediately before the conjugated verb:

Affirmative Negative
Înțeleg. (I understand.) Nu înțeleg. (I don't understand.)
El vine. (He comes.) El nu vine. (He doesn't come.)
Avem timp. (We have time.) Nu avem timp. (We don't have time.)
Ești obosit? (Are you tired?) Nu ești obosit? (Aren't you tired?)

Double Negation (Concordanța negativă)

When a sentence contains negative indefinite words, nu is still required before the verb:

Negative Word Meaning Example
nimic nothing / anything Nu am nimic. (I don't have anything.)
nimeni nobody / anybody Nu e nimeni acasă. (Nobody is home.)
niciodată never Nu merg niciodată acolo. (I never go there.)
nicăieri nowhere Nu găsesc nicăieri. (I can't find it anywhere.)
niciun / nicio no (+ noun) Nu am niciun prieten. (I don't have any friend.)
nici neither / nor Nu vreau nici cafea, nici ceai. (I want neither coffee nor tea.)
deloc at all Nu mă doare deloc. (It doesn't hurt at all.)

Negation with Compound Tenses

In compound tenses (like the past tense with a avea), nu goes before the auxiliary verb:

Tense Example
Present Nu merg. (I don't go.)
Past (perfectul compus) Nu am mers. (I didn't go.)
Future (with o să) Nu o să merg. (I won't go.)

Negating Nouns and Adjectives

To negate a noun or adjective without a verb, use nu before the element:

  • Nu eu! — Not me!
  • Nu acum. — Not now.
  • Nu aici. — Not here.

Examples in Context

Romanian English Note
Nu înțeleg. I don't understand. Basic negation
El nu vine azi. He isn't coming today. Nu before verb
Nu am nimic. I don't have anything. Double negative — standard
Nu merg niciodată acolo. I never go there. Double negative with niciodată
Nu e nimeni acasă. Nobody is home. Double negative with nimeni
Nu vreau nici cafea, nici ceai. I want neither coffee nor tea. Triple negative with nici...nici
Nu am niciun ban. I don't have a single penny. Niciun + noun
Nu-mi place. I don't like it. Nu before clitic + verb
Nu am fost acolo. I haven't been there. Negation in compound past
Nu știu unde este. I don't know where it is. Negation in main clause
Nu mai vreau. I don't want anymore. Nu mai = no longer
Nu încă. Not yet. Fragment negation

Common Mistakes

Omitting nu when using negative indefinites.

  • Wrong: Am nimic. (attempting "I have nothing")
  • Right: Nu am nimic.
  • Why: Romanian requires nu before the verb even when other negative words are present. Every negative idea needs nu on the verb.

Placing nu in the wrong position.

  • Wrong: Merg nu la școală.
  • Right: Nu merg la școală.
  • Why: Nu must immediately precede the conjugated verb (or auxiliary). It cannot be placed between the verb and its complement.

Avoiding double negatives due to English habits.

  • Wrong: Nu am ceva. (attempting "I don't have anything" using the affirmative ceva)
  • Right: Nu am nimic.
  • Why: English speakers instinctively avoid double negatives, but Romanian requires them. Use negative indefinites (nimic, nimeni, niciodată) together with nu.

Separating nu from the verb with an adverb.

  • Wrong: Nu azi merg. (intending "I'm not going today")
  • Right: Nu merg azi. or Azi nu merg.
  • Why: Nu must be directly adjacent to the verb (or its clitic pronouns). Adverbs go after the verb or at the beginning of the sentence.

Usage Notes

Negation with nu is identical in all registers — casual speech, formal writing, and everything in between. There is no equivalent of the French formal ne...pas vs. informal dropping of ne; Romanian consistently uses nu in all contexts.

In rapid spoken Romanian, nu before a vowel-initial verb may contract: nu amn-am, nu estenu-i or nu e. These contractions are common in casual speech and informal writing but should be avoided in formal contexts.

The combination nu mai means "no longer" or "not anymore" and is extremely frequent: Nu mai vreau (I don't want anymore), Nu mai am timp (I don't have time anymore).

Nici functions as both "neither/nor" and as an emphatic "not even": Nici nu știu (I don't even know), Nici eu (Me neither).

Practice Tips

  • Practice negating every affirmative sentence you learn. For each new verb or expression, immediately create its negative counterpart with nu.
  • Memorize the negative indefinites (nimic, nimeni, niciodată, nicăieri) as a set and practice using each one in a sentence with nu before the verb.
  • Read short Romanian dialogues and identify every negation pattern. Count the negatives in each sentence to reinforce the double-negation rule.

Related Concepts

  • Prerequisite: Basic Word Order — understanding where nu fits in the sentence structure

前提概念

Basic Word OrderA1

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