Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω, σκοντάφτω σε μικρά πράγματα που είναι στο πάτωμα.

Breakdown of Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω, σκοντάφτω σε μικρά πράγματα που είναι στο πάτωμα.

είμαι
to be
δεν
not
σε
on
μικρός
small
αν
if
που
that
το πράγμα
the thing
το πάτωμα
the floor
κοιτάω
to look
κάτω
down
σκοντάφτω
to stumble
σε
over

Questions & Answers about Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω, σκοντάφτω σε μικρά πράγματα που είναι στο πάτωμα.

Where is the word for I in this sentence?

Greek often leaves out subject pronouns when they are already clear from the verb ending.

Here:

  • κοιτάω = I look
  • σκοντάφτω = I trip / I stumble

So Greek does not need εγώ unless the speaker wants emphasis:

  • Εγώ δεν κοιτάω κάτω... = I don’t look down...

In the original sentence, the I is understood from the verbs.

Why does the sentence begin with αν?

Αν means if. It introduces the condition:

  • Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω = If I don’t look down

In this sentence, it sets up a general, repeated situation:

  • If / whenever I don’t look down, I trip...

So αν is not only for one specific future event; it is also used for habitual conditions like this.

Why are both verbs in the present tense?

Because the sentence describes a habitual or general truth, not one single event.

  • δεν κοιτάω = I don’t look
  • σκοντάφτω = I trip

Together, they mean something like:

  • When I don’t look down, I tend to trip
  • If I don’t look down, I trip

If Greek wanted to describe a single future event, it would normally use a different structure, for example:

  • Αν δεν κοιτάξω κάτω, θα σκοντάψω.
  • If I don’t look down, I’ll trip.

So the present tense here gives a repeated, everyday meaning.

Why is it κοιτάω? Can it also be κοιτάζω?

Yes. κοιτάω and κοιτάζω are both common forms meaning I look.

So these are both natural:

  • Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω...
  • Αν δεν κοιτάζω κάτω...

This is a very common variation in Modern Greek. Learners will often see both forms in dictionaries and real speech.

What does κάτω mean here?

Here κάτω means down.

So:

  • κοιτάω κάτω = I look down

It is an adverb, not a noun or object. It tells you the direction of the looking.

You may also see longer versions like:

  • κοιτάω προς τα κάτω = I look downward / downwards

But κοιτάω κάτω is very natural and common.

Why is it σκοντάφτω σε? What does σε do here?

The verb σκοντάφτω is commonly used with σε to mean trip over / stumble on / bump into something.

So:

  • σκοντάφτω σε μικρά πράγματα = I trip over small things

Even though English says over, Greek uses σε here.

This is something learners often just have to memorize as part of the verb’s pattern:

  • σκοντάφτω σε κάτι = I trip over something
Why is there no article in σε μικρά πράγματα?

Because the sentence means small things in a general sense, not the small things.

  • σε μικρά πράγματα = on/over small things
  • σε τα μικρά πράγματα would be wrong
  • στα μικρά πράγματα would mean on the small things or to the small things, which is a much more specific idea

So the lack of article makes the phrase indefinite and general:

  • small things that happen to be on the floor
What does που είναι στο πάτωμα mean grammatically?

This is a relative clause. It describes πράγματα.

Breakdown:

  • πράγματα = things
  • που = that / which
  • είναι στο πάτωμα = are on the floor

So:

  • μικρά πράγματα που είναι στο πάτωμα = small things that are on the floor

In Greek, που is a very common way to say that / which / who in relative clauses.

Why is it στο πάτωμα and not σε το πάτωμα?

Because στο is the contracted form of:

  • σε + το = στο

So:

  • στο πάτωμα = on the floor

This contraction is standard in Modern Greek. You will see it all the time:

  • στο σπίτι = in/to the house
  • στο δρόμο = on the road
  • στο πάτωμα = on the floor
Does στο πάτωμα mean on the floor or to the floor?

Here it means on the floor.

The preposition σε can cover several meanings in English, including in, at, to, and sometimes on, depending on context.

In this sentence:

  • πράγματα που είναι στο πάτωμα clearly means
  • things that are on the floor

The verb είναι = are, so this is about location, not movement.

Could the word order be different?

Yes, Greek word order is more flexible than English word order.

The original sentence is completely natural:

  • Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω, σκοντάφτω σε μικρά πράγματα που είναι στο πάτωμα.

But Greek can sometimes move parts around for emphasis, for example:

  • Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω, σε μικρά πράγματα που είναι στο πάτωμα σκοντάφτω.

That sounds more marked and emphatic, though. The original version is the most neutral and natural for a learner to use.

Why is δεν placed before κοιτάω?

In Greek, δεν is the normal negation word used before finite verbs.

So:

  • κοιτάω = I look
  • δεν κοιτάω = I don’t look

Its position is very regular:

  • δεν + verb

That is why the sentence says:

  • Αν δεν κοιτάω κάτω...
  • If I don’t look down...
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