Κοίταξα τον εαυτό μου στον καθρέφτη και είδα ότι είχα λίγη οδοντόκρεμα στο πουκάμισο.

Breakdown of Κοίταξα τον εαυτό μου στον καθρέφτη και είδα ότι είχα λίγη οδοντόκρεμα στο πουκάμισο.

λίγος
little
και
and
έχω
to have
βλέπω
to see
σε
on
σε
in
ότι
that
κοιτάω
to look at
το πουκάμισο
the shirt
τον εαυτό μου
myself
ο καθρέφτης
the mirror
η οδοντόκρεμα
the toothpaste

Questions & Answers about Κοίταξα τον εαυτό μου στον καθρέφτη και είδα ότι είχα λίγη οδοντόκρεμα στο πουκάμισο.

What does Κοίταξα mean here, and what tense is it?

Κοίταξα is the aorist of κοιτάζω (to look).

Here it means I looked in the sense of a single completed action:

  • Κοίταξα = I looked
  • not I was looking or I used to look

So the sentence begins with a quick, finished action: I looked at myself in the mirror...

Why does Greek use τον εαυτό μου for myself?

Greek usually expresses myself with the phrase:

  • ο εαυτός μου = myself / literally my self
  • τον εαυτό μου = myself in the accusative, because it is the object of the verb

So:

  • Κοίταξα τον εαυτό μου = I looked at myself

This is the normal Greek way to say it. Greek does not usually use a single word equivalent to English myself in this kind of sentence.

Also, even a woman would normally say τον εαυτό μου, because εαυτός is a masculine noun.

Why is there an article in τον εαυτό μου?

Because εαυτός behaves like a normal noun in Greek, and Greek normally uses the definite article with it.

So the structure is:

  • τον = the (masculine accusative singular)
  • εαυτό = self
  • μου = my

Literally, it is something like the self of mine, but naturally it means myself.

What is στον καθρέφτη, exactly?

στον is a contraction of:

  • σε + τονστον

So:

  • σε = a very common preposition meaning to / in / at / on
  • τον = the (masculine accusative singular)

And:

  • καθρέφτη = mirror in the accusative singular

So στον καθρέφτη literally means in/to/at the mirror, but in this sentence the natural English translation is in the mirror.

Why is it καθρέφτη and not καθρέφτης?

Because καθρέφτης is the dictionary form (nominative singular), but here the word comes after σε / στον, so Greek uses the accusative:

  • ο καθρέφτης = the mirror (nominative)
  • τον καθρέφτη = the mirror (accusative)

This is a very common pattern with masculine nouns ending in -ης:

  • ο μαθητήςτον μαθητή
  • ο καθρέφτηςτον καθρέφτη
What does ότι mean here?

ότι means that and introduces a whole clause:

  • είδα ότι... = I saw that...

So:

  • είδα ότι είχα λίγη οδοντόκρεμα στο πουκάμισο
    = I saw that I had some toothpaste on my shirt

A useful detail: ότι (that) is different from ό,τι (whatever / anything that).

Why is it είδα ότι είχα and not είδα ότι έχω?

Because the sentence is being told from a past viewpoint.

  • είδα = I saw / I noticed
  • είχα = I had

Here είχα is the imperfect of έχω, and it describes a state that was true at that moment in the past.

So:

  • είδα ότι είχα λίγη οδοντόκρεμα... = I saw that I had some toothpaste...

This is very natural in narrative Greek. It matches the English pattern I saw that I had...

You may also hear present tense after verbs like είδα in casual speech in some contexts, but the version here is the straightforward past narrative choice.

Why is it λίγη οδοντόκρεμα?

Because οδοντόκρεμα (toothpaste) is:

  • feminine
  • usually uncountable

So Greek uses λίγη (a little / some) to agree with it:

  • λίγη = feminine singular
  • οδοντόκρεμα = feminine singular

So:

  • λίγη οδοντόκρεμα = a little toothpaste / some toothpaste

Compare:

  • λίγος καφές = a little coffee (masculine)
  • λίγη οδοντόκρεμα = a little toothpaste (feminine)
  • λίγο νερό = a little water (neuter)
Why does the sentence say στο πουκάμισο and not στο πουκάμισό μου?

Because Greek often leaves out the possessive when it is already obvious from the context.

Since the speaker is talking about looking at themself and noticing toothpaste on the shirt they are wearing, my shirt is understood.

So:

  • στο πουκάμισο = on the shirt
  • but in context it means on my shirt

You could also say:

  • στο πουκάμισό μου

That would be more explicit, and it is also correct.

Why does στο mean on in στο πουκάμισο?

Because Greek σε is a very broad preposition. It can correspond to English:

  • in
  • at
  • on
  • to

So the exact English translation depends on the noun and the context.

Here:

  • στο πουκάμισο literally uses σε + το
  • but natural English is on the shirt

Likewise:

  • στο σπίτι = at home / in the house
  • στο τραπέζι = on the table
  • στο σχολείο = at school
  • στον γιατρό = to the doctor / at the doctor’s
Is the word order fixed, or could it be changed?

Greek word order is fairly flexible, although the original sentence sounds natural and neutral.

Original:

  • Κοίταξα τον εαυτό μου στον καθρέφτη και είδα ότι είχα λίγη οδοντόκρεμα στο πουκάμισο.

You could move things around for emphasis, for example:

  • Κοίταξα στον καθρέφτη τον εαυτό μου...
  • και είδα ότι στο πουκάμισο είχα λίγη οδοντόκρεμα

But these versions change the focus slightly. The original order is the most straightforward and natural way to say it.

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