Το κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ.

Breakdown of Το κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ.

είμαι
to be
εδώ
here
μου
my
το κρεβάτι
the bed
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Questions & Answers about Το κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ.

Why is there a definite article (Το) even though it means “my bed”?
In Greek, nouns with possessive clitics (like μου) almost always take the definite article. So το κρεβάτι μου literally looks like “the bed of me,” but it’s the normal way to say “my bed.” Dropping the article is either wrong or very marked (poetic/vocative).
Why does μου come after the noun instead of before it?
μου is a weak (enclitic) possessive pronoun; in possession it follows the noun: το βιβλίο μου, η τσάντα σου, το κρεβάτι του. To put something before the noun for emphasis, Greek uses δικός/δική/δικό: το δικό μου κρεβάτι = “my own bed.”
Can I say “Κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ” without the article?
Not in standard neutral speech. Without το, it sounds like a vocative (“O my bed…”) or very poetic. Use Το κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ.
What’s the gender and case of κρεβάτι here, and why?
κρεβάτι is neuter. Here it’s nominative singular, because it’s the subject of the sentence. The article το agrees with it in gender/number/case: το κρεβάτι.
How do I pronounce the whole sentence?
  • Το [to]
  • κρεβάτι [kreˈvati] (stress on -βά-; note: Greek β = [v], not [b])
  • μου [mu]
  • είναι [ˈine] (stress on first syllable)
  • εδώ [eˈðo] (stress on -δώ-; Greek δ = [ð], like “th” in “this”)

Put together: [to kreˈvati mu ˈine eˈðo].

Where are the stress accents and what do they mean?

Greek writes one stress accent per stressed word:

  • κρεβάτι (accent on ά) → stress on the second syllable
  • είναι (accent on εί) → stress on the first syllable
  • εδώ (accent on ώ) → stress on the last syllable
    The accent shows which vowel is stressed; it’s crucial for correct pronunciation.
What exactly is είναι, and what are the basic present-tense forms of “to be”?

είναι is the 3rd person singular (and also 3rd person plural) of είμαι “to be.”

  • εγώ είμαι (I am)
  • εσύ είσαι (you are, sg.)
  • αυτός/αυτή/αυτό είναι (he/she/it is)
  • εμείς είμαστε (we are)
  • εσείς είστε / είσαστε (you are, pl.)
  • αυτοί/αυτές/αυτά είναι (they are)
Can I change the word order to “Εδώ είναι το κρεβάτι μου”?
Yes. Το κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ and Εδώ είναι το κρεβάτι μου are both natural. Fronting εδώ puts focus on the location (“Here’s where my bed is”).
How do I make it plural: “My beds are here”?

Τα κρεβάτια μου είναι εδώ.
Notes: plural article τα, plural noun κρεβάτια (regular -ι → -ια), and the verb remains είναι for both singular “is” and plural “are” in Greek.

What’s the difference between μου and δικό μου?
  • μου is the unstressed possessive clitic: το κρεβάτι μου = “my bed.”
  • δικό μου adds emphasis/contrast: το δικό μου κρεβάτι = “my own bed / my bed (as opposed to someone else’s).”
Is μου ever written with an accent?
In modern monotonic spelling, monosyllables like μου are normally unaccented. Some writers add an accent to show contrastive stress (e.g., μού), but that’s optional and stylistic. You don’t need it here.
How do I turn this into a question: “Is my bed here?”

Use the same word order and change the punctuation to the Greek question mark (which looks like a semicolon):
Το κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ;
You can also front the adverb: Είναι εδώ το κρεβάτι μου;

What’s the difference between εδώ and εκεί (and εδώ πέρα)?
  • εδώ = here (near the speaker)
  • εκεί = there (farther away)
  • εδώ πέρα = “right here/around here,” a bit more emphatic/colloquial than plain εδώ.
Could I use a more “locative” verb, like “is located”?

Yes: Το κρεβάτι μου βρίσκεται εδώ.
βρίσκεται = “is located/located itself,” a touch more formal or specific to location.

Where do adjectives go if I add one?

The default is before the noun, with the article at the start and the possessive after the noun:

  • Το μεγάλο κρεβάτι μου είναι εδώ. = “My big bed is here.”
    You can also use the “post-nominal” (second attributive) position with a repeated article for emphasis:
  • Το κρεβάτι μου το μεγάλο είναι εδώ. (more contrastive: “my bed, the big one, is here.”)