Endaxi -
This does not mean “You are right.” It does not mean “I forgive you.” It means: “I am exhausted. The sun is too hot. The sea is still there. This argument is not worth the death of the afternoon.” It is the white flag of practicality, a ceasefire born not of conviction but of Mediterranean fatigue.
Most tourists learn endaxi as a synonym for "OK." You ask for a coffee without sugar? Endaxi. You confirm a taxi fare? Endaxi. It is the grease on the wheels of transaction. But this is the shallowest reading. endaxi
You cannot translate endaxi without losing its soul. English has "fine" (cold), "OK" (neutral), and "alright" (vague). Greek has a word that can start a fight, end a fight, or acknowledge that a fight was always meaningless. This does not mean “You are right
It is the answer of someone who is not fine, but who has no intention of unpacking their tragedy in the middle of the street. It is a polite, dignified shuttering of the soul. It acknowledges the chaos but refuses to bow to it. It says: Things are not good. But they are in order. I am managing. This argument is not worth the death of the afternoon
And for a moment, it truly is.
So you shrug. You light a cigarette. You say, “Endaxi.”

