En la ĝardeno mi vidas etan birdon.

Breakdown of En la ĝardeno mi vidas etan birdon.

mi
I
la
the
vidi
to see
en
in
ĝardeno
the garden
birdo
the bird
eta
small

Questions & Answers about En la ĝardeno mi vidas etan birdon.

Why does the sentence start with En la ĝardeno instead of Mi vidas?

Because Esperanto word order is fairly flexible.

Starting with En la ĝardeno puts the location first, a bit like In the garden, I see a small bird in English. It gives emphasis to where the action happens.

A more neutral order would also be:

Mi vidas etan birdon en la ĝardeno.

Both are correct. The endings help show the grammar, so word order can be moved around more freely than in English.

What does en mean here?

En means in or inside.

So:

  • en la ĝardeno = in the garden

Here it shows location, not movement.

Why is it ĝardeno and not some other ending?

Ĝardeno ends in -o because -o is the normal ending for a noun in Esperanto.

So:

  • ĝardeno = garden
  • birdo = bird

This is one of the most basic patterns in Esperanto:

  • -o = noun
  • -a = adjective
  • -e = adverb
  • -i = infinitive verb
Why does vidas end in -as?

Because -as is the present-tense verb ending in Esperanto.

So:

  • vidi = to see
  • vidas = see / am seeing

With mi, vidas means I see.

Esperanto verbs do not change for person, so:

  • mi vidas = I see
  • vi vidas = you see
  • li vidas = he sees
  • ili vidas = they see

The verb stays vidas for all of them.

Why is it birdon instead of birdo?

The -n marks the direct object.

In this sentence, the bird is what is being seen, so it takes -n:

  • mi vidas birdon = I see a bird

This is called the accusative ending.

It helps show who is doing the action and what receives the action:

  • mi = the one seeing
  • birdon = the thing seen
Why is it etan instead of eta?

Because adjectives must agree with the nouns they describe.

Since birdon has -n, the adjective describing it must also have -n:

  • eta birdo = a small bird
  • etan birdon = a small bird (as direct object)

So the adjective matches the noun in grammar.

Do both etan and birdon need the -n?

Yes.

In Esperanto, adjectives agree with their nouns in both:

  • number (singular/plural)
  • case (including the accusative -n)

So:

  • eta birdo = a small bird
  • etaj birdoj = small birds
  • etan birdon = a small bird (object)
  • etajn birdojn = small birds (objects)

That is why both words get the matching ending here.

Why is there la in la ĝardeno, but no word for a before birdon?

Esperanto has a definite article, la, but it does not have an indefinite article like English a/an.

So:

  • la ĝardeno = the garden
  • birdo = a bird or just bird, depending on context

That means etan birdon naturally means a small bird here, even though there is no separate word for a.

Could en la ĝardeno mean into the garden?

Not in this sentence.

Here en la ĝardeno means in the garden because it describes location.

If you want to show movement into somewhere, Esperanto often uses the accusative of direction:

  • Mi iras en la ĝardenon. = I am going into the garden.

Notice the -n on ĝardenon. That shows motion toward the inside.

So:

  • en la ĝardeno = in the garden
  • en la ĝardenon = into the garden
Can I also say Mi vidas etan birdon en la ĝardeno?

Yes, absolutely.

That is probably the most straightforward order for many learners because it is closer to normal English order:

Mi vidas etan birdon en la ĝardeno.

The original version:

En la ĝardeno mi vidas etan birdon.

just emphasizes the setting first. Both are grammatical.

How is ĝ pronounced in ĝardeno?

Ĝ is pronounced like the j in judge.

So ĝardeno begins roughly like jar- in English, though not exactly the same in every accent.

A rough pronunciation guide:

  • En = en
  • la = lah
  • ĝardeno = jar-DEH-no
  • mi = mee
  • vidas = VEE-dahs
  • etan = EH-tahn
  • birdon = BEER-don

Esperanto pronunciation is very regular, and each letter normally has just one sound.

Why is mi included? Could it be omitted?

Normally, mi should be included.

Esperanto verbs do not change according to person, so vidas by itself just means sees / am seeing / is seeing in a general grammatical sense. Without the pronoun, you usually would not know who the subject is.

So Esperanto normally says:

  • mi vidas = I see
  • vi vidas = you see
  • ŝi vidas = she sees

Unlike Spanish or Italian, the subject pronoun is usually not dropped.

What is the basic structure of this sentence?

The structure is:

  • En la ĝardeno = prepositional phrase showing location
  • mi = subject
  • vidas = verb
  • etan birdon = direct object

So the sentence works as:

In the garden + I + see + a small bird

This is a good example of how Esperanto uses endings to make the roles of words clear.

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