Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon ĉiutage, ĉar la lifto foje ne funkcias.

Questions & Answers about Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon ĉiutage, ĉar la lifto foje ne funkcias.

Why is it ŝtuparon and not ŝtuparo?

Because ŝtuparon has the -n ending, which marks the direct object in Esperanto.

In this sentence:

  • Ŝi = she
  • uzas = uses
  • la ŝtuparon = the stairs / the staircase

She is using the stairs, so the stairs are the thing directly affected by the verb. That is why ŝtuparo becomes ŝtuparon.

A very literal breakdown is:

  • Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon = She uses the staircase

Without -n, the grammar would be wrong here.

Why is there la before ŝtuparon and lifto?

La is the Esperanto definite article, meaning the.

So:

  • la ŝtuparon = the stairs / the staircase
  • la lifto = the elevator

Esperanto has only one definite article: la. It does not change for gender, number, or case. Even when a noun gets -n, the article stays la.

So you get:

  • la ŝtuparo = the staircase
  • la ŝtuparon = the staircase as a direct object
Why does uzas end in -as?

In Esperanto, all present-tense verbs end in -as.

So:

  • uzi = to use
  • uzas = uses / is using

The nice thing is that Esperanto verbs do not change depending on the subject:

  • mi uzas = I use
  • vi uzas = you use
  • ŝi uzas = she uses
  • ili uzas = they use

The verb ending stays the same.

What does ĉiutage mean, and how is it built?

Ĉiutage means every day or daily.

It is built from:

  • ĉiu = each, every
  • tago = day
  • -e = adverb ending

So the idea is roughly:

  • ĉiu tago = every day
  • ĉiutage = daily / every day

Since ĉiutage is an adverb, it describes how often she uses the stairs.

Why is ĉiutage one word instead of two?

Esperanto often forms compact adverbs by combining roots and endings into one word.

So although ĉiu tago means every day, the adverbial form ĉiutage means daily / every day as an adverb.

This is very common in Esperanto. For example:

  • tage = by day / during the day
  • nokte = at night
  • hejme = at home

So ĉiutage functions as a single adverb meaning something like on every day.

What does ĉar mean, and how is it used?

Ĉar means because.

It introduces a reason:

  • Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon ĉiutage, ĉar la lifto foje ne funkcias.
  • She uses the stairs every day, because the elevator sometimes does not work.

A clause after ĉar usually gives the explanation for what came before it.

What does foje mean? Is it the same as kelkfoje?

Foje means sometimes, at times, or on occasion.

It comes from fojo meaning occasion or time in the sense of an occurrence, plus the adverb ending -e.

  • fojo = occasion
  • foje = sometimes / occasionally

It is similar to kelkfoje, which also means sometimes. In many contexts they are close in meaning, though kelkfoje may feel a bit more literally like a few times / sometimes.

Why is it ne funkcias instead of one word for doesn't work?

In Esperanto, negation is usually made with the separate word ne, which means not.

So:

  • funkcias = works / functions
  • ne funkcias = does not work / is not functioning

Esperanto does not use helper verbs like do/does for this. It simply puts ne before the verb.

Examples:

  • Mi komprenas = I understand
  • Mi ne komprenas = I do not understand
Does funkcias mean works in the sense of having a job?

Not usually in this sentence. Here funkcias means functions, operates, or works properly.

So:

  • la lifto funkcias = the elevator works / is functioning
  • la lifto ne funkcias = the elevator does not work

If you want to say a person works at a job, Esperanto often uses labori:

  • Ŝi laboras = She works

So:

  • funkcii = to function, to operate
  • labori = to work, to do work
Is ŝtuparo really stairs, even though it looks singular?

Yes. Ŝtuparo literally refers to a staircase, flight of stairs, or stairway, but in natural translation it often corresponds to English the stairs.

English often uses a plural noun where Esperanto may use a singular collective idea.

So:

  • la ŝtuparo can mean the staircase
  • in context, it may be best translated as the stairs

That is why Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon can naturally mean She uses the stairs.

How do you pronounce ŝ, ĉ, and ŭ in this sentence?

These letters are very common in Esperanto and have fixed sounds:

  • ŝ sounds like sh in shoe
  • ĉ sounds like ch in church
  • ŭ is a short w-like sound, usually in combinations

So in this sentence:

  • Ŝi sounds roughly like shee
  • ŝtuparon begins with sht
  • ĉiutage begins with chee
  • there is no ŭ in this sentence, but learners often ask about the accented letters together

Esperanto pronunciation is very regular, so each letter has one main sound.

Why is the word order Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon ĉiutage? Could ĉiutage go somewhere else?

Yes, ĉiutage can move around, because Esperanto word order is fairly flexible.

This sentence uses a very normal order:

  • Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon ĉiutage = She uses the stairs every day

But you could also say:

  • Ŝi ĉiutage uzas la ŝtuparon
  • Ĉiutage ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon

These are all understandable. The choice depends on emphasis and style.

Because Esperanto marks the direct object with -n, the sentence can stay clear even when word order changes.

Why doesn’t lifto have an -n ending?

Because la lifto is the subject of the second clause, not the direct object.

In:

  • la lifto foje ne funkcias

the elevator is the thing that does not function. It is performing the action of the verb in a grammatical sense, so it stays in the basic form:

  • lifto

By contrast, in the first clause:

  • Ŝi uzas la ŝtuparon

the stairs are the direct object, so they take -n:

  • ŝtuparon
Can uzas here imply habit, not just one action?

Yes. In Esperanto, the simple present tense -as can express both:

  • a current action
  • a general habit
  • a repeated action

So in this sentence, uzas naturally means a habitual action:

  • she uses the stairs every day

The word ĉiutage makes that especially clear, because it shows regular repetition.

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