Po obiedzie odkładam ścierkę na półkę.

Questions & Answers about Po obiedzie odkładam ścierkę na półkę.

Why is it po obiedzie and not po obiad?

Because po in the meaning after normally takes the locative case in Polish.

  • obiad = lunch / dinner
  • locative singular: obiedzie
  • so: po obiedzie = after lunch

This is a very common pattern:

  • po pracy = after work
  • po szkole = after school
  • po filmie = after the film

So po obiedzie is not just a phrase you memorize on its own; it follows a regular grammar rule.

What exactly does obiad mean?

Obiad is often translated as lunch or dinner, depending on context and cultural habits.

In Polish, obiad usually means the main cooked meal of the day, often eaten in the afternoon. So in some contexts it matches English lunch, and in others it may feel closer to dinner.

So po obiedzie can mean:

  • after lunch
  • or after dinner

The correct translation depends on the situation, not on the grammar.

Why is it odkładam, and what does that verb mean exactly?

Odkładam comes from odkładać, which often means:

  • to put away
  • to put back
  • to set aside
  • sometimes to postpone in other contexts

In this sentence, it means I put back / put away.

The prefix od- often adds the idea of moving something away from the current place or returning it to where it belongs. So odkładam ścierkę na półkę suggests not just placing the cloth somewhere, but putting it back where it is normally kept.

Why is there no ja for I?

Because Polish usually drops subject pronouns when they are clear from the verb form.

  • odkładam = I put away / I am putting away
  • the ending -am already tells you the subject is I

So ja is unnecessary unless you want extra emphasis, contrast, or clarity.

For example:

  • Odkładam ścierkę na półkę. = I put the cloth on the shelf.
  • Ja odkładam ścierkę na półkę, a ty myjesz naczynia. = I put the cloth on the shelf, and you wash the dishes.
Why is ścierka changed to ścierkę?

Because it is the direct object of the verb, so it is in the accusative case.

The dictionary form is:

  • ścierka = cloth / dishcloth / tea towel

But after a transitive verb like odkładam (I put away), it changes to the accusative:

  • nominative: ścierka
  • accusative: ścierkę

This is a very common pattern for many feminine nouns ending in -a:

  • książkaksiążkę
  • herbataherbatę
  • torbatorbę
What does ścierka mean exactly?

Ścierka usually means a cloth used for wiping, especially in the kitchen.

Possible English translations include:

  • dishcloth
  • tea towel
  • kitchen cloth
  • cleaning cloth

The exact English word depends on what kind of cloth you imagine. In this sentence, dishcloth or kitchen cloth is probably the safest choice.

Why is it na półkę and not na półce?

Because na can take different cases depending on whether you mean movement or location.

Here, the cloth is being moved onto the shelf, so Polish uses the accusative:

  • na półkę = onto the shelf

If you were describing where something already is, you would use the locative:

  • na półce = on the shelf

Compare:

  • Odkładam ścierkę na półkę. = I put the cloth onto the shelf.
  • Ścierka leży na półce. = The cloth is lying on the shelf.

This movement/location contrast is very important in Polish.

Why does półka become półkę?

For the same reason as ścierka → ścierkę: the noun is in the accusative singular.

After na when it means movement toward a place, Polish uses the accusative:

  • półka = shelf
  • na półkę = onto the shelf

So the ending changes from -a to .

Is odkładam present tense? Does it mean I am doing it now, or that I do it regularly?

Yes, odkładam is present tense, but in Polish the present tense of an imperfective verb can mean different things depending on context.

It can mean:

  • I am putting it away right now
  • I put it away regularly / habitually

So this sentence could mean either:

  • After lunch, I’m putting the cloth back on the shelf
  • After lunch, I put the cloth back on the shelf

Without more context, many learners would naturally read it as a habitual action: something the speaker usually does after lunch.

What is the infinitive of odkładam?

The infinitive is odkładać.

So:

  • odkładać = to put away / to put back
  • odkładam = I put away / I am putting away

This verb is imperfective. Its perfective partner is usually odłożyć.

Compare:

  • odkładam = I am putting away / I usually put away
  • odłożę = I will put away / I will have put away

That aspect difference is very typical in Polish verbs.

Could I use kładę instead of odkładam?

Sometimes, but the meaning would be slightly different.

  • kładę = I put / I lay / I place
  • odkładam = I put back / I put away / I set aside

So:

  • Kładę ścierkę na półkę = I put the cloth on the shelf
  • Odkładam ścierkę na półkę = I put the cloth back on the shelf / away on the shelf

Odkładam sounds more natural if the idea is returning the cloth to its usual place.

Can odkładać also mean something else?

Yes. Besides put away / put back, odkładać can also mean to postpone.

For example:

  • Odkładam spotkanie na jutro. = I’m postponing the meeting until tomorrow.

So the exact meaning depends on context. In your sentence, because of ścierkę na półkę, the physical meaning put away / put back is clearly intended.

Is the word order fixed?

No, Polish word order is quite flexible, though some orders sound more neutral than others.

The given sentence:

  • Po obiedzie odkładam ścierkę na półkę.

is a natural, neutral order.

You could also say things like:

  • Ścierkę odkładam po obiedzie na półkę.
  • Po obiedzie ścierkę odkładam na półkę.

But these may sound more marked, more contrastive, or more focused on a particular part of the sentence.

For a learner, the original order is a very good standard pattern:

time expression + verb + object + destination

How do you pronounce ścierkę?

A rough English-friendly guide is:

  • ścierkęSHCHER-keh

A bit more carefully:

  • ś is a soft sh sound
  • cie sounds roughly like che
  • rk is pronounced clearly
  • ę at the end is often pronounced approximately like e or a nasalized vowel, depending on speech style

So learners often aim for something close to:

  • SHCHER-keh

It does not match English sounds perfectly, but that approximation is good enough as a starting point.

How do you pronounce półkę?

A rough guide is:

  • półkęPOOW-keh

Notes:

  • ó is pronounced like Polish u
  • ł is pronounced like English w
  • at the end is roughly keh, sometimes with a slight nasal quality depending on pronunciation style

So półka sounds roughly like POOW-ka, and półkę like POOW-keh.

Could this sentence mean I put the cloth away after lunch rather than After lunch, I put the cloth away?

Yes. In natural English those two are basically the same in meaning, and the Polish sentence allows that interpretation.

Po obiedzie is a time phrase, so it tells you when the action happens. In smooth English, you could translate it as:

  • After lunch, I put the cloth back on the shelf.
  • I put the cloth back on the shelf after lunch.

Both are fine. The Polish sentence simply places the time phrase first.

What cases appear in the sentence?

There are three important noun forms here:

  • po obiedzielocative after po
  • ścierkęaccusative as the direct object
  • na półkęaccusative after na because it expresses movement toward a place

So this sentence is a nice example of how Polish case endings show relationships that English often expresses mainly through word order and prepositions.

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