Ανακατεύω τον καφέ μου με το κουτάλι, ενώ διαβάζω τις ειδήσεις στο κινητό.

Breakdown of Ανακατεύω τον καφέ μου με το κουτάλι, ενώ διαβάζω τις ειδήσεις στο κινητό.

ο καφές
the coffee
μου
my
με
with
σε
on
διαβάζω
to read
το κουτάλι
the spoon
το κινητό
the mobile phone
η είδηση
the news
ενώ
while
ανακατεύω
to stir
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Questions & Answers about Ανακατεύω τον καφέ μου με το κουτάλι, ενώ διαβάζω τις ειδήσεις στο κινητό.

Why is it τον καφέ μου and not ο καφές μου?

Because τον καφέ μου is the direct object of the verb ανακατεύω (I stir). Direct objects take the accusative case:

  • ο καφές = the coffee (nominative, used for the subject)
  • τον καφέ = the coffee (accusative, used for the object)

What does μου mean here, and why is it placed after καφέ?

μου means my. In Greek, possessive pronouns like μου/σου/του/της commonly come after the noun:

  • τον καφέ μου = my coffee
    You can also place it before for emphasis (less common in everyday neutral style):
  • τον δικό μου καφέ = my coffee (emphatic: “my own coffee”)

Is ανακατεύω a continuous action, or just a single action?

In the present tense, ανακατεύω normally expresses an ongoing or habitual action depending on context. Here, with ενώ διαβάζω..., it clearly sounds ongoing at the same time (stirring while reading). Greek present tense is generally imperfective (action in progress / repeated).


Why do we use με το κουτάλι? Does με mean with or by?

με primarily means with, but it often expresses the means/instrument as well:

  • με το κουτάλι = with a spoon / using a spoon
    Greek doesn’t have a separate “instrumental case,” so με + accusative covers this idea.

Why is it το κουτάλι (neuter) but τον καφέ (masculine)? How do I know the gender?

Nouns in Greek have grammatical gender. You learn it with the article:

  • ο καφές (masculine)
  • το κουτάλι (neuter)
    The article changes with case too:
  • ο καφέςτον καφέ
  • το κουτάλιτο κουτάλι (neuter accusative looks the same as neuter nominative)

What exactly does ενώ mean here? Is it always “while”?

In this sentence, ενώ means while (two actions happening at the same time):

  • Ανακατεύω... ενώ διαβάζω... = I stir… while I read…
    It can also sometimes mean whereas/while on the other hand in contrast contexts, but not here.

Could I replace ενώ with καθώς or την ώρα που?

Yes, with small differences in style:

  • ενώ = common, neutral
  • καθώς = also “while/as,” slightly more formal/literary sometimes
  • την ώρα που = literally “at the time that,” more explicit
    All can work here.

Why is it διαβάζω τις ειδήσεις and not just διαβάζω ειδήσεις?

Greek often prefers the definite article when referring to something specific/expected in context:

  • τις ειδήσεις = the news (e.g., today’s news / the news feed)
    You can say διαβάζω ειδήσεις, but it sounds more like “I read news (in general)” or “I read news stories,” less specific.

What is στο κινητό? Why not σε το κινητό?

στο is the common contraction of σε + το:

  • σε το κινητόστο κινητό = on/at the phone
    Similarly:
  • σε τηνστην
  • σε τονστον

Does στο κινητό mean “on the phone” or “on my phone”? Should it be στο κινητό μου?

στο κινητό means on the phone (device as the place/medium). If you want to specify “my phone,” add μου:

  • στο κινητό μου = on my phone
    Without μου, it’s still natural if the context already implies it.

Is the word order fixed? Can I move the ενώ clause?

It’s flexible. You can also say:

  • Ενώ διαβάζω τις ειδήσεις στο κινητό, ανακατεύω τον καφέ μου με το κουτάλι.
    Same meaning; starting with the ενώ clause can feel slightly more “scene-setting.”

What should I watch out for in pronunciation/stress?

Key stress points:

  • ανακατεύω
  • καφέ
  • κουτάλι
  • ειδήσεις
  • κινητό
    Also note ειδήσεις has the stress on -δή- and is plural: η είδηση (singular) → οι ειδήσεις (plural).