אחרי הארוחה ניקיתי את המטבח, כי הוא היה מלוכלך.

Breakdown of אחרי הארוחה ניקיתי את המטבח, כי הוא היה מלוכלך.

את
direct object marker
כי
because
אחרי
after
להיות
to be
מטבח
kitchen
הוא
it
ארוחה
meal
לנקות
to clean
מלוכלך
dirty
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Questions & Answers about אחרי הארוחה ניקיתי את המטבח, כי הוא היה מלוכלך.

Why is ניקיתי enough to mean I cleaned without a separate word for I?

In Hebrew past tense, the verb itself usually tells you who did the action.

  • ניקיתי = I cleaned
  • The ending ־תי often marks I in the past tense.

So Hebrew does not need a separate subject pronoun here. You could add אני for emphasis, but normally it is unnecessary:

  • אני ניקיתי את המטבח = I cleaned the kitchen
    This sounds more emphatic, like I cleaned it.

In the sentence you gave, ניקיתי already clearly means I cleaned.

What does אחרי mean, and how does it work in אחרי הארוחה?

אחרי means after.

In אחרי הארוחה:

  • אחרי = after
  • הארוחה = the meal

So together: after the meal

Hebrew commonly uses אחרי + noun this way, with no extra word like English of or anything similar.

Examples:

  • אחרי השיעור = after the lesson
  • אחרי העבודה = after work
  • אחרי הארוחה = after the meal
Why is it הארוחה and not just ארוחה?

The prefix ה־ means the.

So:

  • ארוחה = a meal
  • הארוחה = the meal

In this sentence, the speaker is referring to a specific meal, so the meal is natural.

If you said אחרי ארוחה, it would sound more like after a meal or after eating a meal, which is less specific and not the usual choice here.

Why is there an את before המטבח?

את is the Hebrew marker of a definite direct object.

Here:

  • ניקיתי = I cleaned
  • את המטבח = the kitchen

Because המטבח means the kitchen and is definite, Hebrew uses את before it.

Important: את usually does not get translated into English. It is a grammar marker, not a separate meaning word.

Compare:

  • ניקיתי מטבח = I cleaned a kitchen
    No את, because it is not definite.
  • ניקיתי את המטבח = I cleaned the kitchen
    את is required because the object is definite.
Why is it המטבח and not just מטבח?

Again, ה־ means the.

  • מטבח = kitchen / a kitchen
  • המטבח = the kitchen

Since the sentence refers to a particular kitchen, Hebrew uses the definite form המטבח.

This is also why the sentence includes את before it: את is used with a definite direct object.

Why does the sentence use כי?

כי means because.

So:

  • כי הוא היה מלוכלך = because it was dirty

It introduces the reason for cleaning the kitchen.

This is very common Hebrew:

  • נשארתי בבית כי הייתי עייף = I stayed home because I was tired
  • סגרתי את החלון כי היה קר = I closed the window because it was cold
Why does the sentence say הוא for the kitchen? Isn't הוא normally he?

Yes, הוא can mean he, but it can also mean it when referring to a masculine noun.

In Hebrew, every noun has grammatical gender. מטבח is masculine, so when you refer back to it, you use הוא.

So here:

  • המטבח = the kitchen
  • הוא היה מלוכלך = it was dirty

For a feminine noun, you would use היא instead.

Example:

  • הצלחת הייתה מלוכלכת כי היא נפלה
    The plate was dirty because it fell
    Here היא refers to הצלחת, which is feminine.
Why is it היה מלוכלך?

היה is the past tense of to be for he/it masculine singular.

Since המטבח is masculine singular, Hebrew uses:

  • הוא היה מלוכלך = it was dirty

Breakdown:

  • הוא = it / he
  • היה = was
  • מלוכלך = dirty (masculine singular form)

Hebrew adjectives agree with the noun in gender and number, so everything matches מטבח.

Why is מלוכלך in that form?

Because adjectives in Hebrew must agree with the noun they describe.

Since מטבח is:

  • masculine
  • singular

the adjective must also be masculine singular:

  • מלוכלך = dirty (masculine singular)

Other forms:

  • מלוכלכת = dirty (feminine singular)
  • מלוכלכים = dirty (masculine plural)
  • מלוכלכות = dirty (feminine plural)

Examples:

  • המטבח מלוכלך = the kitchen is dirty
  • הצלחת מלוכלכת = the plate is dirty
  • החדרים מלוכלכים = the rooms are dirty
Could Hebrew leave out הוא and just say כי היה מלוכלך?

Sometimes yes, but in this sentence הוא helps make the reference clear.

  • כי הוא היה מלוכלך = because it was dirty

If you say:

  • כי היה מלוכלך

it can still mean because it was dirty, but the subject is less explicit. Hebrew often includes the pronoun when referring back to something already mentioned, especially to keep the sentence clear and natural.

Another very natural option would be:

  • כי המטבח היה מלוכלך = because the kitchen was dirty

That repeats the noun instead of using a pronoun.

Why is the word order אחרי הארוחה ניקיתי...? Can Hebrew put the time expression first like that?

Yes. Hebrew is flexible about word order, and putting a time expression first is very common.

So:

  • אחרי הארוחה ניקיתי את המטבח = After the meal, I cleaned the kitchen

This sounds natural and helps set the scene first.

You could also say:

  • ניקיתי את המטבח אחרי הארוחה

This also means I cleaned the kitchen after the meal. The difference is mostly one of focus and style, not basic meaning.

Is the comma before כי necessary?

In standard written Hebrew, a comma before כי is often used when כי introduces a reason clause, especially in a sentence like this.

So:

  • אחרי הארוחה ניקיתי את המטבח, כי הוא היה מלוכלך.

is perfectly normal.

In less formal writing, people are sometimes inconsistent with commas, but the comma here is standard and helpful because it separates the main clause from the explanation.

Can אחרי הארוחה also mean after lunch or after dinner, not just after the meal?

Yes. ארוחה means meal, so the phrase itself is general: after the meal.

In real context, it could refer to:

  • breakfast
  • lunch
  • dinner
  • any specific meal

If the context already makes clear which meal is meant, אחרי הארוחה is enough.

If you want to be specific, Hebrew can say:

  • אחרי ארוחת הבוקר = after breakfast
  • אחרי ארוחת הצהריים = after lunch
  • אחרי ארוחת הערב = after dinner
Could I say לאחר הארוחה instead of אחרי הארוחה?

Yes. לאחר also means after.

So:

  • אחרי הארוחה = after the meal
  • לאחר הארוחה = after the meal

The difference is mostly style:

  • אחרי is very common and everyday.
  • לאחר is a bit more formal or written.

Both are correct, but אחרי הארוחה sounds very natural in ordinary speech.

How would this sentence change if the speaker were female?

Only the verb ניקיתי would stay the same, because in the I form of the past tense, masculine and feminine are the same.

So a male speaker and a female speaker both say:

  • ניקיתי = I cleaned

That means the full sentence stays exactly the same:

  • אחרי הארוחה ניקיתי את המטבח, כי הוא היה מלוכלך.

If the sentence were in a different person, gender might show up more clearly. For example:

  • ניקית = you cleaned (to a male)
  • ניקית = you cleaned (to a female)
    Same spelling in modern Hebrew, though pronunciation/context may differ in some cases.
  • ניקה = he cleaned
  • ניקתה = she cleaned

So in your sentence, nothing needs to change for a female speaker.