אתן מתווכחות הרבה, או שאתן מדברות בשקט?

Breakdown of אתן מתווכחות הרבה, או שאתן מדברות בשקט?

לדבר
to speak
או
or
אתן
you (plural, feminine)
ש
that
הרבה
a lot
בשקט
quietly
להתווכח
to argue

Questions & Answers about אתן מתווכחות הרבה, או שאתן מדברות בשקט?

Why does the sentence use אתן?

אתן is the you form used when speaking to two or more females.

So this sentence is addressed to a group of women or girls.
If you were speaking to a group of males, or to a mixed group, you would normally use אתם instead.

Why is אתן repeated twice?

Hebrew often repeats the subject pronoun for clarity or contrast, especially when two alternatives are being compared.

So:

אתן מתווכחות הרבה, או שאתן מדברות בשקט?

feels like:

Are you arguing a lot, or are you speaking quietly?

The second אתן is not strictly always necessary in casual speech, but it makes the contrast clearer.

What does מתווכחות mean grammatically?

מתווכחות is the feminine plural present-tense form of להתווכח.

Because the subject is אתן (you, feminine plural), the verb must also be feminine plural.

So the agreement is:

  • אתן מתווכחות = you women/girls argue / are arguing
Does מתווכחות mean argue or are arguing?

It can mean either one.

In Hebrew present tense, the same form often covers both:

  • you argue
  • you are arguing

The exact meaning depends on context. In this sentence, English could translate it either way.

Why does מתווכחות start with מ-?

That is part of the normal present-tense pattern of this verb.

The verb is להתווכח = to argue.
Its present forms include:

  • מתווכח — masculine singular
  • מתווכחת — feminine singular
  • מתווכחים — masculine plural
  • מתווכחות — feminine plural

So the מ- here is not a separate word; it is part of the verb form.

What does הרבה mean here?

Here הרבה means a lot.

After a verb, הרבה often works like an adverb:

  • מדבר הרבה = talks a lot
  • עובדות הרבה = work a lot
  • מתווכחות הרבה = argue a lot

Depending on context, it can sometimes feel close to often, but a lot is the basic idea here.

Why is there a ש in שאתן?

The ש is the conjunction ש־, which often means that, but in sentences like this it can simply link the next clause.

So:

  • או = or
  • שאתן = that you / you

In natural English, we usually do not translate that ש־ directly here.
So או שאתן מדברות בשקט is just or (that) you are speaking quietly → more naturally, or are you speaking quietly.

What does מדברות mean grammatically?

מדברות is the feminine plural present-tense form of לדבר = to speak / to talk.

Because the subject is אתן, the verb must match it:

  • אתן מדברות = you women/girls speak / are speaking
What does בשקט mean?

בשקט means quietly, softly, or literally in quiet.

It is made of:

  • ב־ = in / with
  • שקט = quiet / silence

So מדברות בשקט means speaking quietly or talking softly.

Is there an actual word for are in this sentence?

No. Hebrew does not normally use a separate word for am / is / are in the present tense.

So Hebrew says:

  • אתן מדברות
    literally: you speaking

but it means:

  • you speak
  • you are speaking

This is completely normal in Hebrew.

Could the pronouns be omitted?

Yes, often they could.

A Hebrew speaker might also say:

מתווכחות הרבה, או שמדברות בשקט?

Because the verb endings already show feminine plural, the subject is often understood.

However, keeping אתן makes the sentence clearer and a bit more emphatic.

Is this sentence specifically feminine, or could it be used for men too?

It is specifically feminine.

Both the pronoun and the verbs are feminine plural:

  • אתן
  • מתווכחות
  • מדברות

If you were speaking to men or a mixed group, you would normally say:

אתם מתווכחים הרבה, או שאתם מדברים בשקט?

AI Language TutorTry it ↗
What's the best way to learn Hebrew grammar?
Hebrew grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.

Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor

Start learning Hebrew

Master Hebrew — from אתן מתווכחות הרבה, או שאתן מדברות בשקט to fluency

All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods.

  • Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
  • Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
  • Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
  • AI tutor to answer your grammar questions