κάποιος
Wordform Details
Translation: someonesomebody
Part of Speech: pronoun
Inflection Type:
masculinesingularnominativeIs Dictionary Form: Yes
Dictionary Form Details
Lemma: κάποιος
Translation: someone; somebody; some; a certain; any (pronoun)
Etymology: Derived from Ancient Greek 'καί' (and, also) + 'ποιός' (what kind of, which). The combination evolved to express indefiniteness. This formation pattern of creating indefinite pronouns by combining particles with interrogative pronouns is common across Indo-European languages, similar to how English 'some-one' combines 'some' with 'one'.
Mnemonics
- Think of 'cap-ee-os' as 'capping' or covering the identity of someone - it's an indefinite pronoun that doesn't specify exactly who.
- The 'poi' in 'κάποιος' sounds like 'poi-nt' - you're pointing to someone, but not specifically.
Cultural Context
Used frequently in everyday Greek conversation. The word is versatile and can function both as a pronoun ('someone') and as an adjective ('some'). Greeks often use it when referring to unspecified people or things in a general way.
Easily Confused With
Explanation: While 'κάποιος' means 'someone/somebody' in affirmative contexts, 'κανείς' typically means 'anyone/anybody' in questions and 'nobody/no one' in negative contexts.
Confused word:
Είναι κανείς στην πόρτα;
Is anyone at the door?
Notes: In questions, 'κάποιος' suggests you believe someone exists but don't know who, while 'κανείς' is more open-ended about whether anyone exists at all.
Mnemonic: 'Κάποιος' starts with 'κάπ' like 'capture' - it captures a specific but unnamed person. 'Κανείς' sounds like 'can is' - questioning if anyone 'can' be there.
Explanation: 'Κάποιος' means 'someone' (indefinite), while 'όποιος' means 'whoever' (relative pronoun).
Confused word:
Όποιος θέλει, μπορεί να έρθει.
Whoever wants to can come.
Notes: 'Όποιος' introduces a relative clause and refers to any person who meets a condition, while 'κάποιος' refers to an unspecified but singular person.
Mnemonic: Think of 'όποιος' as 'open to anyone' (whoever), while 'κάποιος' is more specific (someone).