היא חותכת את תפוחי האדמה, ואני חותך את הבצל לארוחת הערב.

Breakdown of היא חותכת את תפוחי האדמה, ואני חותך את הבצל לארוחת הערב.

אני
I
היא
she
ו
and
את
direct object marker
ל
for
תפוח אדמה
potato
בצל
onion
לחתוך
to cut
ארוחת ערב
dinner

Questions & Answers about היא חותכת את תפוחי האדמה, ואני חותך את הבצל לארוחת הערב.

Why are the verbs different: חותכת in the first clause and חותך in the second?

Because Hebrew present-tense verbs agree with the subject’s gender and number.

  • היא חותכת = she is cutting / she cuts
  • אני חותך = I am cutting / I cut said by a male speaker

If the speaker were female, it would be:

  • אני חותכת

So in this sentence, היא is feminine, and אני is apparently a man.

What does את mean here? It doesn’t seem to translate into English.

את marks a definite direct object. It usually is not translated into English.

In this sentence:

  • היא חותכת את תפוחי האדמה
  • אני חותך את הבצל

Both תפוחי האדמה and הבצל are definite nouns, so Hebrew uses את before them.

A useful rule:

  • If the direct object is definite, use את
  • If it is indefinite, usually no את

For example:

  • אני חותך בצל = I am cutting an onion / onion
  • אני חותך את הבצל = I am cutting the onion
Why is it תפוחי האדמה and not just one word for potatoes?

Hebrew commonly says potatoes as תפוחי אדמה, which literally means apples of the earth/ground.

This is a construct chain:

  • תפוחי = apples of...
  • האדמה = the ground / the earth

Together:

  • תפוחי אדמה = potatoes
  • תפוחי האדמה = the potatoes

So even though it looks like multiple words, it functions as one noun phrase meaning potatoes.

Why is the ה attached only to אדמה in תפוחי האדמה?

This is because of how definiteness works in a Hebrew construct chain.

In a construct chain, the whole phrase becomes definite if the second noun is definite.

So:

  • תפוחי אדמה = potatoes
  • תפוחי האדמה = the potatoes

You do not usually put ה on the first noun in this structure. The definiteness is shown on the second part: האדמה.

Why is there את before תפוחי האדמה and הבצל, but not before לארוחת הערב?

Because לארוחת הערב is not a direct object. It is a prepositional phrase.

  • את תפוחי האדמה = the direct object
  • את הבצל = the direct object
  • לארוחת הערב = for dinner / for the evening meal

The word את is only used before definite direct objects, not before phrases introduced by prepositions like ל־ (to / for).

What exactly does לארוחת הערב mean, and how is it built?

לארוחת הערב means for dinner or more literally for the evening meal.

It is made up of:

  • ל־ = to / for
  • ארוחת = meal of...
  • הערב = the evening

So:

  • ארוחת ערב = dinner / evening meal
  • ארוחת הערב = the dinner / the evening meal
  • לארוחת הערב = for the dinner / for dinner

Notice that ל + ה often combine in spelling:

  • ל + ארוחת is just לארוחת
  • there is no separate את here because this is a prepositional phrase
Is Hebrew using a present tense here, even though these forms look like participles?

Yes. In modern Hebrew, what learners often call the present tense is historically based on participles, but functionally it is the normal way to say am cutting / cut in the present.

So:

  • חותך = cutting / cuts
  • חותכת = cutting / cuts

Depending on context, the sentence can mean:

  • She is cutting the potatoes, and I am cutting the onion for dinner or
  • She cuts the potatoes, and I cut the onion for dinner

Usually context tells you which English translation sounds best.

Could the pronouns היא and אני be omitted?

Often, yes.

Because the present-tense form shows gender and number, Hebrew can sometimes omit the subject pronoun when it is clear from context.

For example:

  • חותכת את תפוחי האדמה, ואני חותך את הבצל
  • or even
  • חותכת את תפוחי האדמה, וחותך את הבצל

However, speakers often keep pronouns:

  • for clarity
  • for emphasis
  • when contrasting subjects

In this sentence, היא ... ואני ... makes the contrast very clear: she is doing one thing, and I am doing another.

Why is ואני written as one word?

Because the Hebrew word for and, ו־, is normally attached directly to the following word as a prefix.

So:

  • ו = and
  • אני = I
  • ואני = and I

This is extremely common in Hebrew. The conjunction ו־ is almost always written attached to the next word.

Why is the onion singular but the potatoes plural?

That is just the content of this particular sentence: one person is cutting the potatoes, and the other is cutting the onion.

Grammatically:

  • תפוחי האדמה is plural
  • הבצל is singular

This does not affect the form of חותך / חותכת, because the verb agrees with the subject (she, I), not with the object.

Can I say אני חותך את הבצל לערב instead of לארוחת הערב?

Not if you want the same meaning.

  • לערב means for the evening / by evening
  • לארוחת הערב means for dinner

So לארוחת הערב is the natural phrase here because the cutting is being done as preparation for the meal.

How would this sentence change if the speaker were female?

Only the first-person verb would need to change:

  • היא חותכת את תפוחי האדמה, ואני חותכת את הבצל לארוחת הערב.

That is because אני does not itself show gender, but the present-tense verb does:

  • male speaker: אני חותך
  • female speaker: אני חותכת
How is the sentence pronounced?

A common pronunciation guide would be:

Hi khotékhet et tapukhéi ha-adamá, va-aní khotékh et ha-batsál le-arukhát ha-érev.

A few notes:

  • ח is a throat sound, often written kh
  • stress is usually near the end:
    • khotékhet
    • adamá
    • batsál
    • arukhát
    • érev

If you are learning to read naturally, it is better to use this only as support and keep practicing from the Hebrew script too.

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