What “Râ” Actually Does
If you’ve been studying Farsi for more than a week, you’ve seen this word everywhere: را (râ). It shows up after nouns, after pronouns, sometimes after whole phrases. and your textbook probably told you it means “the direct object marker.” Which is technically true and completely unhelpful (even Persian grammar on Wikipedia uses this vague label).
This post is part of the Persian Grammar series.
Here’s what râ actually does: it marks a specific direct object, as UT Austin’s Persian reference also explains. Not just any object. a specific one that both speaker and listener already know about. Think of it as the difference between “I read a book” and “I read the book.” In Farsi, that difference isn’t handled by articles (Persian doesn’t have “the”). It’s handled by râ.
Man ketâb khândam (من کتاب خواندم) = I read a book (any book, unspecified)
Man ketâb râ khândam (من کتاب را خواندم) = I read the book (that specific book we both know about)
One tiny word, and the entire meaning shifts. If you’ve been learning Farsi sentence structure, you know the verb goes at the end. Râ slots in right before the verb, after the object it marks. That’s its home.
For learners coming from English, this is a mental shift. English uses word order and articles to signal specificity. Persian uses râ. Once it clicks, you’ll notice it everywhere. and you’ll start hearing when native speakers drop it (which they do constantly in casual speech).
The Râ Rule: را (râ) goes after the SPECIFIC direct object, before the verb. If the object is indefinite (a book, some water, any car), skip râ entirely. For more examples, MSU’s Persian textbook has a dedicated section on this.
Where Râ Goes in a Sentence
Persian follows SOV word order: Subject – Object – Verb. Râ attaches to the object, sitting between it and the verb. Always.
Man film râ didam (من فیلم را دیدم) = I saw the movie
Ali ketâb râ khând (علی کتاب را خواند) = Ali read the book
Mâ ghazâ râ khordim (ما غذا را خوردیم) = We ate the food
Notice the pattern: the noun comes first, then râ, then the verb. Râ never wanders. It doesn’t go before the noun. It doesn’t attach to the verb. It sits loyally after whichever noun it’s marking as specific.
When the object has adjectives or an ezafe chain, râ goes after the entire noun phrase. not after the first noun:
Man ketâb-e bozorg râ khândam (من کتاب بزرگ را خواندم) = I read the big book
Ali mâshin-e ghermez râ did (علی ماشین قرمز را دید) = Ali saw the red car
The whole noun phrase (ketâb-e bozorg, mâshin-e ghermez) is the unit. Râ marks the end of that unit.
When to Use Râ vs When to Skip It
This is where most learners stumble. The rule is deceptively simple:
Specific/definite object → use râ
Indefinite/unspecified object → no râ
But what counts as “specific”? If you and your listener both know exactly which thing you’re talking about, it’s specific. If you’re talking about any random instance, it’s not.
Man châi râ khordam = I drank the tea (that specific cup in front of us)
Man châi khordam = I drank tea (just some tea, generally)
U ketâb râ âvord = She brought the book (the one we discussed)
U ketâb âvord = She brought a book (some book, we don’t know which)
In English, the difference between “the” and “a” does this work. In Farsi, the presence or absence of râ does it. If you find yourself reaching for “the” in your English translation, you probably need râ. If “a” or “some” fits better, skip it.
One common trap: proper nouns and pronouns are always specific. “Ali râ didam” (I saw Ali), “in râ mikhâham” (I want this one). You don’t say “I saw an Ali.” The specificity is built in.
The Spoken Shortcut: -ro and -o
Here’s where textbooks check out and real Farsi begins. In spoken Persian, nobody says “râ.” They say -ro or -o, and it glues directly onto the word before it.
ketâb râ → ketâb-o (کتابو). the book
film râ → film-o (فیلمو). the movie
ghazâ râ → ghazâ-ro (غذارو). the food
mâshin râ → mâshin-o (ماشینو). the car
The pattern: if the word ends in a consonant, add -o. If it ends in a vowel, add -ro. This is 100% automatic in speech. every Iranian does it without thinking. If you walk around Tehran saying “râ” instead of “-ro/-o,” people will understand you perfectly but you’ll sound like you’re reading from a textbook.
Man in ketâbo khundam = I read this book (spoken)
Mâ ghazâro khordim = We ate the food (spoken)
Ali unâro did = Ali saw them (spoken)
My students in Milan always ask: “Should I learn the formal or spoken version?” Both. Write râ. Say -ro/-o. That’s how every educated Iranian operates.
Common Mistakes with Râ
After teaching hundreds of students, these are the five mistakes I see most often:
Mistake 1: Using râ with indefinite objects.
Wrong: “Man ye ketâb râ khândam” (I read a book-râ). If it’s “a book” (ye ketâb), don’t add râ. The “ye” (one/a) and râ contradict each other. you can’t mark something as both indefinite and specific simultaneously.
Mistake 2: Using râ with the verb budan (to be).
Wrong: “In ketâb râ bozorg ast.” Râ marks direct objects. With budan (to be), there’s no direct object. there’s a complement. “In ketâb bozorg ast” (This book is big). No râ needed.
Mistake 3: Putting râ in the wrong position.
Wrong: “Man râ ketâb khândam.” Râ goes after the object, not after the subject. “Man ketâb râ khândam” is correct.
Mistake 4: Forgetting râ with specific objects.
“Man film didam” when you mean “I saw the [specific] movie.” Without râ, this just means “I watched a movie / I went to the movies”. a general activity, not a specific film.
Mistake 5: Overusing râ with every object.
Not every object needs it. “Man âb mikhâham” (I want water) is fine without râ because you’re talking about water in general. “Man âb râ mikhâham” implies a specific glass/bottle of water.
Râ with Pronouns
When pronouns are direct objects, they take râ too. But in spoken Farsi, the full pronoun + râ contracts into a single quick word:
man râ → mano (منو). me
to râ → toro (تورو). you
u râ → uno (اونو). him/her
mâ râ → mâro (مارو). us
shomâ râ → shomâro (شمارو). you (formal/plural)
ânhâ râ → unâro (اوناروr). them
Mano didid? = Did you see me?
Toro dust dâram = I like you (literally: I have you as a friend)
Uno khabr kon = Let him/her know
These contracted forms are so common that many learners hear them before they realize what they’re hearing. “Toro” doesn’t look like “to + râ” until someone explains it. We’ll go deeper into pronoun contractions at A2 level with the advanced râ lesson. for now, just recognize these forms when you hear them.
How Râ Connects to Everything Else
Râ isn’t an isolated grammar point. it connects to almost everything else in Persian:
- Sentence Structure. râ reinforces SOV order by marking which noun is the object
- Pronouns. pronoun + râ creates the contracted object forms you’ll hear daily
- Prepositions. indirect objects use prepositions (be, az, bâ), not râ. “Be Ali goftam” (I told Ali), not “Ali râ goftam”
- Plurals. specific plurals take râ too: “ketâbhâ râ khândam” (I read the books)
- The Ezafe. râ goes after the full ezafe phrase: “ketâb-e bozorg râ” not “ketâb râ-e bozorg”
Think of râ as the spotlight operator. It shines a light on whichever noun is the specific, known object of the verb. Everything else in the sentence arranges around it.
man in ketâb râ khândam
من این کتاب را خواندم
I read this book.
man in ketâbo khundam
من این کتابو خوندم
I read this book.
Using the full “shomâ râ” instead of “shomâro” carries weight in Persian. It signals respect, formality, and social distance. like the difference between “you” and “thou” in old English. You’ll hear “shomâ râ” from waiters addressing customers, in courtrooms, in formal letters, and from anyone being deliberately, carefully polite. In everyday speech, “shomâro” is the default. If someone switches to full “shomâ râ” with you, they’re either being extra respectful or extra sarcastic. context decides.
Add râ to this sentence and translate: “Man film didam” → Make “film” specific.
Show answer
Man film râ didam (من فیلم را دیدم) = I saw the movie. Spoken: Man filmo didam (من فیلمو دیدم).
What’s the spoken (-ro/-o) form of “Man ketâb râ khândam”?
Show answer
Man ketâbo khundam (من کتابو خوندم). “Ketâb” ends in a consonant, so it takes -o. And “khândam” becomes “khundam” in spoken Farsi.
Which sentence needs râ? (A) “Man âb mikhâham” (I want water) or (B) “Man ân âb râ mikhâham” (I want that water)?
Show answer
Sentence B needs râ because “ân âb” (that water) is specific. you’re pointing at a particular glass. Sentence A is general (just wanting water, any water), so no râ.
For the full grammar roadmap, head to the Persian Grammar Guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Want to practice using râ in real sentences with a native speaker? Book a lesson with me on Preply. we’ll drill the definite/indefinite distinction until the spoken forms feel natural, not memorized.