אחרי הארוחה אני זורקת את הזבל לפח.

Breakdown of אחרי הארוחה אני זורקת את הזבל לפח.

אני
I
את
direct object marker
אחרי
after
ארוחה
meal
לזרוק
to throw
זבל
trash
ל
into
פח
bin

Questions & Answers about אחרי הארוחה אני זורקת את הזבל לפח.

Why is it אני זורקת and not אני זורק?

Because the speaker is female.

In Hebrew present tense, the verb agrees with the subject in gender and number:

  • זורק = masculine singular
  • זורקת = feminine singular
  • זורקים = masculine plural
  • זורקות = feminine plural

So אני זורקת means I throw / I am throwing said by a woman or girl.


Does זורקת mean throw, am throwing, or usually throw?

It can mean any of those, depending on context.

Hebrew present tense often covers several meanings that English separates:

  • I throw
  • I am throwing
  • I throw regularly / I usually throw

In this sentence, with אחרי הארוחה (after the meal), it most naturally sounds like a habitual action:

  • After the meal, I throw the trash in the bin.

But in the right context, it could also describe what is happening now.


Why is there an את before הזבל?

Here את is the direct object marker. It comes before a definite direct object.

So:

  • הזבל = the trash
  • therefore Hebrew uses את: את הזבל

This את does not mean you. It is a completely different word.

Compare:

  • אני זורקת זבל = I throw trash / I throw some trash
  • אני זורקת את הזבל = I throw the trash

A very common rule is:

  • if the direct object is definite, use את
  • if it is indefinite, do not use את

What makes הזבל definite?

The prefix ה־ means the.

So:

  • זבל = trash / garbage
  • הזבל = the trash

Since the noun is definite, Hebrew uses the direct object marker את before it.


Why is it אחרי הארוחה?

אחרי means after.

And:

  • ארוחה = meal
  • הארוחה = the meal

So אחרי הארוחה means after the meal.

This is a normal prepositional phrase in Hebrew:

  • אחרי
    • noun
  • אחרי השיעור = after the lesson
  • אחרי העבודה = after work
  • אחרי הארוחה = after the meal

Could Hebrew also say לאחר הארוחה?

Yes. לאחר הארוחה also means after the meal.

The difference is mostly one of register:

  • אחרי = more common in everyday speech
  • לאחר = often a bit more formal or written

In ordinary conversation, אחרי הארוחה is very natural.


Why is the sentence starting with אחרי הארוחה instead of אני?

Hebrew word order is flexible.

Starting with אחרי הארוחה puts the time expression first:

  • אחרי הארוחה אני זורקת את הזבל לפח.

This is very natural and means something like:

  • After the meal, I throw the trash in the bin.

You could also say:

  • אני זורקת את הזבל לפח אחרי הארוחה.

That is also grammatical. The first version simply foregrounds when it happens.


What does לפח mean exactly?

לפח means to the bin / into the bin / in the trash can, depending on context.

It is made of:

  • ל־ = to
  • פח = bin / trash can

So literally it is to a bin, but in natural English it is often translated as:

  • in the bin
  • into the trash
  • into the trash can

With verbs like לזרוק (to throw), Hebrew often uses ל־ where English might prefer into.


Why isn’t it לפח האשפה or אל הפח?

Because לפח is a shorter, very natural everyday way to say it.

A few possibilities:

  • לפח = into the bin / in the trash
  • אל הפח = to the bin, with more emphasis on direction
  • לפח האשפה = into the garbage can, more explicit

In casual speech, לזרוק לפח is extremely common and idiomatic.


Why is there no ה־ on פח?

Because the sentence does not necessarily need to specify the specific bin.

  • לפח can mean into a bin / into the trash / in the bin in a general everyday sense.
  • לפח האשפה or אל הפח would sound more explicit.

In many cases, Hebrew leaves this kind of noun indefinite where English may still naturally say the bin.


Is את here ever confused with the word for you?

Yes, learners often notice that את can also mean you when speaking to one female.

But in this sentence, את is definitely the direct object marker, not the pronoun you.

Why?

Because it is followed by a noun:

  • את הזבל

That pattern strongly shows it is the object marker.

Compare:

  • את זורקת את הזבל. = You (feminine) throw the trash.
  • אני זורקת את הזבל. = I throw the trash.

In the second sentence, the first-person subject אני makes it clear that את is not you.


Can I leave out אני and just say זורקת את הזבל לפח?

Sometimes yes, because the verb form already shows feminine singular.

So in the right context, זורקת את הזבל לפח can be understood as:

  • I throw the trash in the bin or
  • She throws the trash in the bin

That is why אני is useful: it makes the subject explicit and removes ambiguity.

Hebrew often includes pronouns for clarity or emphasis, even when the verb already gives some information.


What is the dictionary form of זורקת?

The dictionary form is לזרוק, meaning to throw.

This verb belongs to a very common pattern, and in the present tense it looks like this:

  • זורק = throwing / throws, masculine singular
  • זורקת = throwing / throws, feminine singular
  • זורקים = throwing / throw, masculine plural
  • זורקות = throwing / throw, feminine plural

So זורקת is the feminine singular present form of לזרוק.


Is this sentence describing one action or a routine?

Most naturally, it sounds like a routine or repeated habit:

  • After the meal, I throw the trash in the bin.

That is because:

  • אחרי הארוחה gives a recurring time frame
  • Hebrew present tense often expresses habits

But depending on context, it could also refer to a specific situation:

  • After the meal, I’m throwing the trash in the bin.

So the sentence itself allows both, but the habitual reading is usually the first one learners should recognize.

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