אני אוכל לחם ושותה מים.

Breakdown of אני אוכל לחם ושותה מים.

אני
I
מים
water
לחם
bread
ו
and
לאכול
to eat
לשתות
to drink
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Questions & Answers about אני אוכל לחם ושותה מים.

What does אני mean, and is it used for both men and women?

אני means I.

Yes, it is used by both male and female speakers. Unlike English, Hebrew often shows gender in the verb form, not in the first-person singular pronoun itself.

Does this sentence mean I eat and drink or I am eating and drinking?

It can mean either one.

In Modern Hebrew, the present tense often covers both:

  • a general/habitual meaning: I eat bread and drink water
  • an action happening right now: I am eating bread and drinking water

Context tells you which meaning is intended.

Why is there no separate word for am?

Because Hebrew does not normally use a separate present-tense form of to be in sentences like this.

English says:

  • I am eating
  • I am drinking

Hebrew just uses the present verb forms:

  • אני אוכל
  • אני שותה

So the idea of am is built into the present-tense structure rather than expressed by a separate word.

Is the speaker male or female?

In this sentence, the speaker is male.

The form אוכל is masculine singular. A female speaker would say:

אני אוכלת לחם ושותה מים

Notice:

  • אוכל → masculine
  • אוכלת → feminine

The second verb, שותה, is written the same way in everyday unpointed Hebrew for both masculine and feminine, though the pronunciation differs.

What kind of verb forms are אוכל and שותה?

They are the Hebrew present-tense forms.

More technically, Hebrew present tense is based on forms often called participles. These forms agree with gender and number, but not with person in the same way English verbs do.

That is why the same masculine singular present form can appear with different subjects, depending on context:

  • אני אוכל = I eat / I am eating
  • אתה אוכל = you eat / you are eating (male)
  • הוא אוכל = he eats / he is eating
Why isn’t אני repeated before שותה?

Because the subject is understood to stay the same.

Hebrew, like English, does not need to repeat the subject when one person is doing both actions:

  • אני אוכל לחם ושותה מים = I eat bread and drink water

You could repeat אני, but it would usually sound unnecessary unless you wanted emphasis.

What does ו־ mean in ושותה?

The prefix ו־ means and.

So:

  • שותה = drinking / drink
  • ושותה = and drinking / and drink

In this sentence it is usually pronounced ve-.

Why is there no את before לחם and מים?

Because את is used before a definite direct object, and these nouns are not definite here.

So:

  • לחם = bread / some bread
  • מים = water

But if you meant specific bread and specific water, you would usually say:

  • אני אוכל את הלחם ושותה את המים

So a useful rule is:

  • no את with indefinite objects
  • usually את with definite objects
Why is there no word for the?

Because the nouns are not definite in this sentence.

Hebrew uses ה־ as the definite article, meaning the:

  • לחם = bread
  • הלחם = the bread
  • מים = water
  • המים = the water

Here the sentence is talking about bread and water in a general or nonspecific way, so there is no ה־.

Is מים plural even though it means water?

Yes, מים looks like a plural form, but it is the normal everyday word for water.

You can think of it as a fixed word that happens to have a plural-looking shape. In other contexts, it often behaves grammatically like a plural noun, but in meaning it is usually just water, not waters.

For a learner, the simplest approach is:

  • memorize מים = water
Can אני be left out?

Sometimes yes, but beginners should usually keep it.

Hebrew often allows subjects to be omitted when the context is clear. However, in the present tense, forms like אוכל do not clearly show person by themselves. So without אני, the phrase could potentially be understood from context as I, you (male), or he.

That is why אני is very helpful here.

How do I know how to pronounce אוכל and שותה if there are no vowel marks?

That is a very common beginner question.

Most modern Hebrew is written without vowel marks. Readers usually figure out the pronunciation from:

  • context
  • familiarity with common words and patterns
  • the surrounding grammar

In this sentence, the context strongly points to the present-tense readings:

  • אוכל
  • שותה

As you read more Hebrew, these patterns become easier to recognize automatically.