Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι τώρα.

Breakdown of Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι τώρα.

είμαι
to be
τώρα
now
έτοιμος
ready
αυτοί
they
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Questions & Answers about Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι τώρα.

What exactly does Αυτοί mean here? Does it just mean they?

Αυτοί is the nominative plural masculine form of the pronoun he / this onethey / these (ones).
In this sentence it’s best translated as they.
It usually refers to a group that is either all male or mixed male–female.
If you wanted to emphasize these people (here), context could also make it feel like these (ones) are ready now.

Can I omit Αυτοί and just say Είναι έτοιμοι τώρα?

Yes. Greek often drops subject pronouns because the verb ending usually shows who the subject is.
Είναι έτοιμοι τώρα is completely natural and means the same thing: They are ready now.
Using Αυτοί adds a bit of emphasis, like they (as opposed to others) are ready now.

Why is the adjective έτοιμοι plural and not έτοιμος?

Adjectives in Greek agree with the noun or pronoun they describe in gender, number, and case.
Since Αυτοί is masculine plural nominative, the adjective must also be masculine plural nominative, so it becomes έτοιμοι.
Singular would be έτοιμος (masc. sg.), but here we’re talking about more than one person.

How would the sentence change if I were talking about a group of women?

For a group of only women, you switch both the pronoun and the adjective to feminine plural:

  • Αυτές είναι έτοιμες τώρα.They (females) are ready now.

Αυτές = feminine plural they, and έτοιμες = feminine plural form of ready.

And what if I’m talking about things or children, not adults?

Then you normally use the neuter plural:

  • Αυτά είναι έτοιμα τώρα.They / These (things, children) are ready now.

So you get:

  • Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι (masc. people or mixed group)
  • Αυτές είναι έτοιμες (fem. people)
  • Αυτά είναι έτοιμα (neuter: things, children, animals, etc.)
Why is there no article, like Οι αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι τώρα?

Subject pronouns like Αυτοί do not take a definite article in Greek, so Οι αυτοί is wrong.
Also, after the verb είμαι (to be), a simple adjective like έτοιμοι is usually used without an article:

  • Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι. (correct)
  • Αυτοί είναι οι έτοιμοι. (different, more like They are the ready ones, i.e. a specific subgroup).
Can I change the word order, like Αυτοί τώρα είναι έτοιμοι or Τώρα είναι έτοιμοι αυτοί?

Yes, Greek word order is quite flexible, and changes mostly affect emphasis. For example:

  • Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι τώρα. (neutral: they are ready now)
  • Τώρα είναι έτοιμοι. (emphasis on now: now they are ready)
  • Αυτοί τώρα είναι έτοιμοι. (slight emphasis that they now are ready, maybe in contrast to before)
  • Τώρα είναι έτοιμοι αυτοί. (stronger emphasis on αυτοί: it’s them who are ready now)

All are grammatical; context determines what sounds most natural.

What does τώρα mean exactly, and is it necessary?

Τώρα means now.
It’s not grammatically required; you can drop it: Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι.They are ready.
Adding τώρα specifies the time and can also contrast with the past, like now (finally) they’re ready.

How do you pronounce Αυτοί είναι έτοιμοι τώρα?

Roughly in simplified English phonetics (stressed syllables in caps):

  • Αυτοί → af-TÍ
  • είναι → Í-ne
  • έτοιμοι → É-ti-mi (the οι is like i)
  • τώρα → TÓ-ra

So the whole sentence: af-TÍ Í-ne É-ti-mi TÓ-ra.
All the written accent marks show where the stress falls in each word.

Why do είναι and έτοιμοι both have the i sound but different spellings (ει, οι)?

Modern Greek has several ways to spell the /i/ sound: ι, η, υ, ει, οι, υι.
Historically they were pronounced differently, but in modern Greek they sound the same.
So είναι and έτοιμοι are both pronounced with i, even though they use ει and οι in spelling.
You mostly have to learn the spelling of each word by practice and exposure.

Is είναι only they are, or can it mean other persons too?

Είναι is the present tense form of είμαι (to be) used for he / she / it / they:

  • είναι = he is, she is, it is, they are

Greek uses the same form for 3rd person singular and plural; context (and pronouns like αυτός / αυτή / αυτά / αυτοί) tells you whether it’s singular or plural.

What is the basic dictionary form of έτοιμοι, and what does it mean?

The base form is έτοιμος (masculine singular).
It means ready, prepared.
Main forms in the nominative are:

  • έτοιμος (masc. sg.)
  • έτοιμη (fem. sg.)
  • έτοιμο (neut. sg.)
  • έτοιμοι (masc. pl.)
  • έτοιμες (fem. pl.)
  • έτοιμα (neut. pl.)

In the sentence, έτοιμοι is used because it agrees with Αυτοί (masc. plural).