Breakdown of وقتی دوباره همدیگر را دیدیم، هر دو لبخند زدیم.
Questions & Answers about وقتی دوباره همدیگر را دیدیم، هر دو لبخند زدیم.
Why does the sentence start with وقتی?
وقتی means when. It introduces a time clause:
- وقتی دوباره همدیگر را دیدیم = when we saw each other again
In Persian, it is very common to begin a sentence with a when-clause like this, followed by the main clause:
- وقتی ... ، ...
- When ..., ...
So the overall structure is:
- وقتی دوباره همدیگر را دیدیم = when we saw each other again
- هر دو لبخند زدیم = both of us smiled
What does دوباره mean here?
دوباره means again.
So:
- دوباره دیدیم = saw again
- وقتی دوباره همدیگر را دیدیم = when we saw each other again
It tells you that this was not the first meeting.
What exactly does همدیگر mean?
همدیگر means each other or one another.
So:
- همدیگر را دیدیم = we saw each other
This word is used when the action is reciprocal, meaning both sides do it to one another.
You may also see:
- یکدیگر = another, slightly more formal/literary way to say each other
In everyday Persian, همدیگر is very common.
Why is there a را after همدیگر?
را marks a specific direct object.
In this sentence:
- همدیگر را دیدیم
the verb دیدیم means we saw, and همدیگر is the object: each other.
Because it is a definite/specific object, Persian uses را.
So the pattern is:
- X را دیدن = to see X
- او را دیدم = I saw him/her
- همدیگر را دیدیم = we saw each other
English does not have a separate marker like this, so it can feel unusual at first.
Why is دیدیم at the end of the first part?
Persian is usually a Subject–Object–Verb language, so the verb often comes at the end of the clause.
Compare:
- English: we saw each other again
- Persian: we each other again saw
That is why you get:
- همدیگر را دیدیم
- literally: each other saw-we
The same thing happens in the second clause:
- لبخند زدیم
- literally: smile struck-we
- natural English: we smiled
Where is the word we in this sentence?
Persian often drops subject pronouns when the verb ending already shows the subject.
Both verbs here end in -یم, which marks we:
- دیدیم = we saw
- زدیم = we hit/struck or, in this expression, we smiled
So Persian does not need to say ما explicitly.
You could say ما for emphasis, but it is not necessary:
- وقتی دوباره همدیگر را دیدیم، هر دو لبخند زدیم
- perfectly natural without ما
What does هر دو mean here?
هر دو means both.
In this sentence it means both of us:
- هر دو لبخند زدیم = we both smiled
Since the verb ending already tells us the subject is we, هر دو naturally means both of us, not just both in some abstract sense.
You can use هر دو with nouns too:
- هر دو دوست = both friends
- هر دو کتاب = both books
Why does Persian say لبخند زدیم instead of using a single verb for smiled?
This is a very common Persian pattern called a light verb construction.
- لبخند = smile
- زدن = literally to hit/strike, but in many expressions it helps form idiomatic verbs
So:
- لبخند زدن = to smile
- لبخند زدیم = we smiled
Many everyday Persian actions are expressed this way:
- حرف زدن = to talk
- نگاه کردن = to look
- تصمیم گرفتن = to decide
So even though زدن literally means to hit, here it is just part of the normal expression for smile.
Is لبخند زدیم literally strange? Why use زدن with smile?
Yes, if you translate word-for-word, it can sound odd:
- لبخند = smile
- زدیم = we struck/hit
But Persian uses light verbs very naturally, and learners should usually treat لبخند زدن as a whole unit meaning to smile.
It is similar to how English says things like:
- take a look
- have a rest
- make a decision
The individual verbs do not always keep their full literal meaning.
What tense is دیدیم and زدیم?
Both are in the simple past.
- دیدیم = we saw
- زدیم = we smiled
So the sentence describes two completed actions in the past:
- we saw each other again
- we both smiled
Because the first clause is introduced by وقتی, English often translates it with when.
How do I know that هر دو means both of us smiled, not the two of them smiled?
The verb ending tells you.
- زدیم ends in -یم, which means we
- so هر دو must refer to both of us
If it were both of them smiled, the verb would be third person plural, for example:
- هر دو لبخند زدند = both of them smiled
So the verb ending is the key clue.
Is the comma necessary in this sentence?
The comma is helpful and very natural, because it separates the time clause from the main clause:
- وقتی دوباره همدیگر را دیدیم، هر دو لبخند زدیم.
It works like English:
- When we saw each other again, we both smiled.
In informal writing, punctuation in Persian can sometimes be looser, but this comma is perfectly standard.
How is the sentence pronounced?
A natural pronunciation would be approximately:
vaqti do-bâre ham-digar râ didim, har do labkhand zadim
A few notes:
- وقتی = vaqti
- دوباره = dobâre
- همدیگر = hamdigar
- را after a vowel often sounds like ro in colloquial speech, but in careful reading it is râ
- لبخند = labkhand
- زدیم = zadim
A more colloquial spoken version might sound a bit like:
vaqti dobare hamdige-ro didim, har do labkhand zadim
Could همدیگر be replaced with something else?
Yes. A common alternative is همو? No, not in standard formal Persian. The main standard alternatives are:
- همدیگر = each other
- یکدیگر = each other, more formal/literary
So you could also say:
- وقتی دوباره یکدیگر را دیدیم، هر دو لبخند زدیم.
This sounds a bit more formal or written.
For everyday speech, همدیگر is more common.
Is this sentence formal, neutral, or conversational?
It is mostly neutral natural Persian.
Why?
- وقتی is standard and common
- دوباره is common
- همدیگر را دیدیم is normal and natural
- لبخند زدیم is standard everyday Persian
A very colloquial spoken version might change pronunciation or wording a little, but the sentence as written is perfectly normal and natural in standard Persian.
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