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bröd · en · ett · han · hon · jag · man · och · vatten · är
10 words
barn · barnet · bok · de · det · dricker · du · flicka · flickan · flickor · god · har · inte · kvinna · kvinnan · kvinnor · läser · mannen · meny · mjölk · mycket · män · natt · ni · pojkar · pojke · pojken · ris · smörgås · så · tidning · varsågod · vi · älskar · äpple · äter
36 words
engelska · hallå · hej · ja · morgon · nej · snälla · svenska · tack · talar · ursäkta
11 words
This means "welcome", but we don't use it in the expression you're welcome. That would be varsågod.
Nope, Swedes don’t have a particular thing for ska music but most names of languages are derived from the name of the country, the adjective or the nationality with the ending –ska added to it.
Examples
Country | Adjective | Nationality | Language |
---|---|---|---|
Sverige Sweden | svensk(t) swedish | en svensk a Swede | svenska Swedish (language) |
England England | engelsk(t) English | en engelsman an Englishman | engelska English (language) |
Oh, and as you have probably already noticed, we do not capitalize adjectives, nationalities or languages (only countries). Unless they happen to come first in the sentence, of course.
fisk · glas · kaffe · kött · ost · te · vin · öl
8 words
Swedish uses two separate indefinite articles, both equivalent to the English a(n), en and ett. The former is used with en-words and the latter with ett-words, hence the names of the two groups.
Swedish does not use a separate article like English the, instead, we add an ending to the word in question. Guess which one!
en-words take -en and ett-words take -et.
However, we do not like to have two vowels next to each other (we just think it sounds wrong). So should the word end in a vowel, we just add the corresponding consonant.
Examples
Indefinite singular | Definite singular |
---|---|
en sked a spoon | skeden the spoon |
ett glas a glass | glaset the glass |
anka · ankan · björn · björnen · djur · djuret · elefant · elefanten · fågel · fågeln · hund · hunden · häst · hästen · katt · katten · krabba · krabban · myra · renen · sköldpadda · sköldpaddan · spindel · spindeln · varg · vargen · älg · älgen
28 words
brevet · brödet · citronen · fisken · fläskköttet · frukosten · frukten · glassen · jordgubben · kaffet · kycklingen · köttet · lunchen · maten · nötköttet · oljan · osten · pastan · pepparn · riset · saltet · smörgåsen · sockret · soppan · teet · tidningen · tomaten · vattnet · vinet · ägget · ölet
31 words
ankor · ankorna · barn · barnen · brev · breven · böcker · böckerna · djur · djuren · elefanter · elefanterna · fiskar · fiskarna · flera · flickorna · fåglar · fåglarna · hundar · hundarna · hästar · hästarna · jordgubbar · jordgubbarna · katter · katterna · kockar · kockarna · kvinnorna · männen · sköldpaddor · sköldpaddorna · smörgåsar · smörgåsarna · tallrikar · tallrikarna · tidningar · tidningarna · älgarna · äpplen · äpplena
41 words
barnens · deras · dess · din · dina · ditt · er · era · ert · flickans · flickornas · hans · hennes · hundarnas · hunds · katternas · kockarnas · kockens · kvinnans · mannens · min · mina · mitt · pojkarnas · restaurangens · sin · sina · sitt · vår · våra · vårt
31 words
byxor · byxorna · halsduk · halsdukar · halsduken · handskar · handske · hatt · hattar · jacka · jackor · jackorna · kjolarna · kjolen · kläderna · klänning · klänningar · klänningen · knapp · knappar · kostym · kostymen · på · rock · rocken · sig · skjorta · skjortan · skjortor · sko · skon · skärp · skärp · slipsarna · slipsen · strumpa · tröja · tröjan · tröjor · tröjorna
40 words
arbetar · ser · simmar
3 words
Verbs are words that describe actions, such as to run or to eat. Verbs come in many different forms and we're about to learn about the Swedish present tense, used to describe what is happening right now, i.e. in the present time.
In English, a distinction is made between he runs and he is running. In Swedish, no such difference exists, both would be correctly translated with han springer.
The Swedish present tense is very simple and easy to learn and is formed in three different ways. With very few exceptions, it always ends with the letter -r. Let's have a look:
Present Tense | English |
---|---|
hoppar | jump(s), is/are jumping |
betalar | pay(s), is/are paying |
simmar | swim(s), is/are swimming |
These are the -ar-verbs. They are 100% regular. Not that this matters right now, but it will later.
Present Tense | English |
---|---|
sover | sleep(s), is/are sleeping |
säljer | sell(s), is/are selling |
sjunger | sing(s), is/are singing |
In this group we find the regular -er-verbs, but also many of the irregular, so called "strong" verbs. This doesn't matter either at this stage, but again, it will later on!
Present Tense | English |
---|---|
bor | live(s), is/are living |
går | go(es), is/are going |
ger | give(s), is/are giving |
In this group as well we find a mix. There are regular -r-verbs, as well as strong verbs. All of them are short, though, consisting of only one syllable.
Also, great news! We do not conjugate verbs based on who is performing the action. Ever! Not for the present tense, not for any tense! Not for any verb! Ever! We promise! 100% guaranteed!
Swedish | English |
---|---|
jag springer | I run |
du springer | you run |
han/hon springer | he/she runs |
vi springer | we run |
ni springer | you run |
de springer | they run |
blå · brun · bruna · brunt · färg · färgglad · grå · grön · grönt · gula · gula · gult · gyllene · lila · orange · rosa · röd · rött · svart · svarta · vit · vita · vitt
23 words
frågan · frågar · förstår · gör · hur · inga · ingen · inget · jo · många · när · om · svar · svarar · svaret · tycker · vad · var · varför · vart · vem · vems · vet · vilka · vilken · vilket
26 words
att · av · bakom · bredvid · efter · eftersom · enligt · framför · framåt · från · för · före · genom · helst · hos · i · innan · med · mellan · mot · när · om · på · som · till · under · utan · utan · utanför · vid · åt · över
32 words
därför · eller · medan · men
4 words
A conjunction is a small word used to link sentences together. English examples are and, but, because, and that.
Some conjunctions, such as och, eller and men are normal conjunctions and merely join two sentences together:
Jag ser dig och du ser mig. I see you and you see me.
Jag vill äta glass men det vill inte du. I want to eat ice cream but you don't.
But there are also so called subordinate conjunctions, such as att, eftersom and innan. They create a subordinate clause, which means that they introduce something that is dependent on the rest of the total sentence.
Jag vet att du är här. I know that you are here.
Jag äter maten eftersom den är god. I eat the food because it is good.
Now, this is all fine and dandy, but there is something to these subordinate conjunctions that is important to know! Just like in English, they can be moved around in and be put both before and after the rest of the sentence. When they are moved to the front, the verb of the other, main part of the sentence must immediately follow them!
Att du är här vet jag . That you are here, I know.
Eftersom den är god äter jag maten. Because it is good, I eat the food.
NB: The conjunction därför att can never start a sentence, in such cases we use eftersom instead.
bror · dotter · familj · far · fru · frus · syster
7 words
See this discussion: https://www.duolingo.com/comment/5667610
bonde · jobb · skådespelare
3 words
Generally when you speak about professions in Swedish, you don't use an article. So when you say in English I am a doctor, in Swedish you should say Jag är läkare., without the article.
The article can be used with professions in some cases, but beware, it may change the meaning. Compare:
Han är clown = He works as a clown. (it is his job)
Han är en clown = He is like a clown. (he behaves like a clown)
In English, if you say He is a clown, you could mean either one of those two things.
If there are any adjectives involved however, the article is used:
Hon är en bra läkare = She is a good doctor.
behöver · dör
2 words
bara · bort · borta · både · egentligen · ens · fortfarande · ganska · hit · igen · långt · nu · också · redan · senare · sent · sällan · till · vanligt · verkligen · än · ändå · åtminstone
23 words
centrum · framsidan · insidan · kyrka · marknad · museum · parken · sverige
8 words
bord · dator · skrivbord · säng
4 words
allmänheten · befolkning · befolkningen · byarna · fiende · fienden · flickvän · folk · folket · individen · killar · kille · killen · konferens · kronprinsessan · kultur · kulturer · kung · medborgare · medborgaren · offret · prins · prinsessa · spädbarn · spädbarnet · ungdomarna · viking · vikingar
28 words
cykel · danmark · engelska · finlandssvenskar · pass · semester · stockholms
7 words
allting · andra · annan · annat · antingen · båda · både · denna · dessa · detta · förra · förrförra · här · ingen · ingendera · ingenting · man · någon · någonting · något · några · själv · sådana · sådant · utom · varandra · varje · vem
28 words
stycken
1 words
missar · ses
2 words
Particle verbs are very characteristic for the Swedish language. You have some in English too, but in Swedish there are many more and they are more frequently used. An English example would be turn off, like in Turn off the radio!, which would be Stäng av radion! in Swedish, also with a particle verb.
In particle verbs, the particle is always stressed. The presence of the particle changes the meaning of the verb, so that the verb with the particle can mean something quite different from what the verb means on its own, just like Turn off the radio! means something very different from Turn the radio!
So, while dyker on its own means 'dives', dyker upp means 'shows up', 'appears'. While håller on its own means just holds, håller med means 'agrees'.
In negated phrases, inte comes between the verb and the particle: Don't turn off the radio! will be Stäng inte av radion!
Deponent verbs are verbs that have the same form as passive verbs (ending with an -s) but are not passive.
All the verbs taught in Lesson 8 of this skill are deponent verbs.
You've already learned one before this lesson: finns, the verb used in the construction Det finns = There is/are.
Morphologically, deponent verbs work the same as other verbs, except that they have the ending -s in every form. Compare: Jag känner dig ('I know you') – Det känns bra ('It feels good').
This is all you really need to know about them, but if you want to know more, you can read here.
Some verbs are reflexive, which means they need to have a reflexive pronoun as an object. To take the verb skyndar sig 'hurry' as an example, it will be like this:
Jag skyndar mig 'I am hurrying'
Du skyndar dig 'You are hurrying'
Han/hon/hen/den/det skyndar sig 'He/she/it is hurrying'
Vi skyndar oss 'We are hurrying'
Ni skyndar er 'You are hurrying'
De skyndar sig 'They are hurrying'
Some verbs can be either reflexive or not reflexive, but take a normal object instead when they're not reflexive. For instance, the Swedish verb lär – either you learn 'yourself', or you teach someone else:
Jag lär mig svenska 'I am learning Swedish'
Du lär dig svenska 'You are learning Swedish'
etc, or:
Jag lär dig svenska 'I am teaching you Swedish'
Du lär mig svenska 'You are teaching me Swedish' etc.
Verbs can be both particle verbs and reflexive at the same time. In that case, what is said above about both those things apply to them. Some examples are
The particle can also come last, as in bryr sig om (literally: 'worries oneself about')- 'cares': Bryr du dig om mig? - 'Do you care about me?'
ansökning · anteckning · anteckningar · betyder · biblioteket · dokument · dokumentet · elev · eleverna · exemplet · föreläsningar · föreläsningarna · föreläsningen · förklaring · kapitel · kapitlet · klasser · kunskap · kunskapen · kunskaper · kurs · lektion · lektionen · lärare · läraren · läxa · mål · målet · ord · pennan · presentation · presentationen · professorns · prov · rapport · rapporten · rast · skola · svårighet · svårigheter · svårigheterna · trots · undervisning · undervisningen · uppsats · utbildning · övning · övningar · övningen
49 words
While it's great to be able to express what is happening right now, a lot of times we will want to talk about what happened earlier. This is were the past tense comes into play.
As with the present tense, there is no difference between I drew and I was drawing. Both are Jag ritade.
Let's look at how we do this in Swedish.
Present tense | Past Tense | English |
---|---|---|
pratar | pratade | talked, was/were talking |
simmar | simmade | swam, was/were swimming |
öppnar | öppnade | opened, was/were opening |
If the present form is -ar, the past form is -ade. This is 100% regular. No exceptions. Remember that both forms have an a in them.
Present tense | Past Tense | English |
---|---|---|
häller | hällde | poured, was/were pouring |
ringer | ringde | phoned, was/were phoning |
läser | läste | read, was/were reading |
köper | köpte | bought, was/were buying |
hör | hörde | heard, was/were hearing |
Ok, this group might look a bit crazy, but it really isn't. The above are all regular er-verbs. If the verb is regular and its present ends in -er, then the past tense is -de.
Unless, the core of the verb ends in either of p, t, k, or s. In this case it takes -te, because we find this easier to pronounce.
If the core ends in r, the regular er-verbs have no present ending, but it still gets its -de in the past tense. Unfortunately, if you see hör you can't see that it is an er-verb, but if you see hörde you immediately know it is a regular er-verb and that it's present form must be hör (only regular er-verbs have a past tense in -de).
Present tense | Past Tense | English |
---|---|---|
tror | trodde | believed, was/were believing |
bor | bodde | lived, was/were living |
klär | klädde | dressed, was/were dressing |
Finally among the regular verbs, we have the short regular r-verbs. Here we simply add -dde, and we're done with them.
Present tense | Past Tense | English |
---|---|---|
ser | såg | saw, was/were seeing |
är | var | was/were, was/were being |
kommer | kom | came, was/were coming |
springer | sprang | ran, was/were running |
dricker | drack | drank, was/were drinking |
skriver | skrev | wrote, was/were writing |
Last of all, irregular verbs. Your favorite, I know! There are a couple of patterns here, but nothing that would ever fit in a description like this, I'm afraid.
Worth noting, however, is that:
Since English and Swedish are related, many irregular verbs are the same: drack-drank, såg-saw, kom-came. This is a great help trying to remembering them.
Just like in English, strong verbs don't have a particular ending, instead they usually change their core vowel. This is where you can go look for patterns, just like in English.
Many times, the infinitive form is referred to as the base form. This is not without reason. When memorizing verbs this is the one most frequently used and most conjugation stem from this form. But what do we use it for?
The infinitive form is used when using a modal verb. These are verbs such as want, will, must. This is actually very similar to how we use the infinitive form in English.
In Swedish it is almost exactly the same.
The difference here is that we don't use any equivalent to to in Swedish, except for in some cases. These are the most common ones.
Here, the Swedish word att acts like the English word to.
Note that we do not need to add att if we have an object directly followed by a verb in infinitive form.
-Låt alla blommor blomma. (Let all flowers bloom) -Vi såg honom springa. (We saw him run)*
There isn't that much to learn as an English speaker when it comes to Swedish infinitive. Learning when to use att and when not to is the key to mastering it, and that will (as usual) come with practice.
Yes, there are exceptions, we're sorry...
Modal verbs do not require the use of att. These include words such as kunna, måste and vilja. For more information regarding modal verbs, refer to the lesson Verbs: Modal.
There are also some ordinary verbs that do not require att. These are börja, sluta, besluta, lära, lära sig.
brasilien · frankrike · frankrikes · fransk · grekland · greklands · göteborg · helsingfors · italien · köpenhamn · malmö · nederländerna · nordamerika · nordeuropa · nordnorge · polen · polens · rom · rysk · ryska · ryskt · same · samer · samerna · samiska · spanien · spaniens · storbritannien · storbritanniens · sydeuropa · åland · öster · österrike · österrikes · östersjön
35 words
apelsin · bageri · bageriet · citron · fläskkött · frukost · frukt · gaffel · glass · hungrig · jordgubbe · juice · kniv · kocken · kopp · kyckling · lunch · mat · middagen · måltid · nötkött · olja · pasta · peppar · saft · saften · salt · sked · socker · soppa · tallrik · tomat · tårta · vegetarian · ägg · äpplet
36 words
frid · fridfull · fridfulla · fridfullt · förlät · galen · galna · gillar · glad · glada · hemsk · hemska · hemskt · ihåg · ilska · kul · känslig · känsliga · känslor · kär · kära · kärlek · kärleken · ler · lycka · lyckan · lyckligt · myser · mysig · mysigaste · mysigt · nervös · nöjd · oroa · oroar · rolig · roliga · roligt · sambo · samboskap · skratt · snäll · sorglig · sorgliga · sorgligt · tråkig · tår · tårar · vemod · vemodet · vemodigt
51 words
ärende
1 words
lätt · lätta · ung
3 words
By now we know some adjectives. We know how to say something is pretty or someting is ugly. But how do we express that is not just pretty, it's the prettiest or that those shoes are uglier than those shoes?
We call these forms comparative and superlative.
Comparative form is used when you compare one thing to another.
And superlative is used when some is of the highest degree possible of something.
So how do we create these words in Swedish? Let's take a look at the regular ones first.
Positive | Comparative | Superlative undefined | Superlative defined |
---|---|---|---|
varm | varmare | varmast | varmaste |
billig | billigare | billigast | billigaste |
viktig | viktigare | viktigast | viktigaste |
For some adjectives, we prefer to compare them with mer and mest rather than using endings .This typically happens with adjectives ending in -isk and participles. However in many cases, both work.
And now to the bad news. A lot of adjectives are irregular, especially the most common ones. You are going to have to learn these the hard way, through practice and experience. But don't lose hope yet, many of these are so common that you will learn the forms really fast!
Present perfect is used to express a past event that has present consequences. That's a very vague description, let's look at examples instead. What if we want to say I have eaten or He has written a book, how do you say that in Swedish? That is when we need to use present perfect and that is also what we are going to learn in this lesson.
What we have to do to express present perfect in Swedish, is to create a form of the verb, that we can use as an adjective. Then we combine this with the present form of ha, which is har.
This probably looks complicated, and to be perfectly honest, it is. There are four different basic ways to construct present perfect in Swedish, and they look like this:
Infinitive | Present Perfect | English Translation |
---|---|---|
prata | har pratat | talk |
höra | har hört | hear |
klä | har klätt | dress, get dressed |
äta | har ätit | eat |
The form we use for the main verb is supine and when we combine this with the auxiliary verb har, we get present perfect, the equivalent of the English past participle.
This is one of those places where Swedish differs more than usual from English so this might need some extra practice. One thing to note is that this form is very common in Swedish and you will have to get used to it not only to understand what people say, but so that you can speak in a more Swedish way.
All the difficulties aside, good luck with your lesson in Swedish present perfect!
biet · borde · ekorrar · ekorren · fick · fjärilar · fjärilen · flugan · får · fåret · grisen · groda · grodan · jagar · kan · kaninerna · ko · kon · lamm · lammet · lejonet · mygga · måste · räven · ska · svans · tigern · tvungna · uggla · ugglan · ödlan
31 words
Modal verbs are verbs that indicate what we in linguistics call modality. Modality is what allows us to attach things such as belief, attitude, and obligation to statements. This means that words such as must, may, want, are all modal verbs.
This probably sounds very abstract at the moment, let's look at how modal verbs can completely change a sentence:
Here we use have as a modal verb.
Here, the modal word is want.
You can already see how important modal verbs are. But how do we use them in Swedish? You just add the modal verb, followed by the main verb in infinitive form.
(If you need a little refresher on the infinitive form, take a quick look at the lesson in infinitive form.)
Notice how we change går from present tense to the infinitive gå. If we use other tenses, we conjugate the modal verb, not the main verb.
Here, we change såg from past tense to the infinitive form, se.
Finally, here is some of the verbs we will be learning in this lesson:
Swedish | English |
---|---|
kan | can |
måste | must |
får | may, be allowed to |
borde | should |
få | get, receive |
ska | will, shall |
Good luck!
betala · fortsätt · fråga · följ · förlåt · ge · gå · gör · hjälp · håll · kom · köp · lek · lyssna · lägg · läs · låt · möt · oroa · ring · sjung · skriv · spring · ställ · svara · sälj · ta · titta · tro · tänk · var · vänta · ät · åk · öppna
35 words
bitti · bjuda · boka · dricka · fungera · följa · gifta · glömma · hindra · hända · hänga · kommer · leta · låta · ordna · påverka · sakna · ska · skynda · sluta · tappa · undervisa · uppnå · vila · övermorgon
25 words
Do you remember how we learned a couple of lessons back how to create Swedish present perfect? If you do, then this is going to be a real breeze!
In the present perfect lesson, we learned how we could form sentences such as:
Jag har ätit = I have eaten
Du har hört = You have heard
We're now going to create very similar sentences, but they are going to take place in the past!
Jag hade ätit = I had eaten
Du hade hört = You had heard
We still use the supine form to create the past perfect, but with the past tense form hade instead of the present tense ha.
Let's take a look at the same table on how to use the supine as we did in the present perfect lesson, but update it for the past perfect instead:
Infinitive | Past perfect | English translation |
---|---|---|
prata | hade pratat | talk |
höra | hade hört | hear |
klä | hade klätt | dress, get dressed |
äta | hade ätit | eat |
All in all, the Swedish past perfect works much the same way as it does in English:
Jag blev bjuden på middag men jag hade redan ätit.
I was invited to dinner but I had already eaten.
Knowing how to use the past perfect is extremely useful for those times when you have to describe what happened in the past, such as what you did last weekend.
Oh, and one last thing. As you know by now, the very common words sade and lade are pronounced just sa and la in Swedish. But this is not the case with hade - it's actually pronounced as though it were written hadde.
Good luck!
I have a car. It is red. I also have a bike. It is blue.
The above sentences are all correct English, but if you read it out loud, it sounds very clunky. We can use what we call relative pronouns to make it feel more fluent.
I have a car that is red and a bike that is blue.
This looks and sounds a lot better! Of course, we can do the exact same thing in Swedish.
Swedish | English |
---|---|
vars | whose |
där | where |
som | who, that, which |
vad | what |
vilket | which |
The most important thing to notice here is that you can not use vem orvar as relative pronouns in Swedish. vem and var are just question words. Here are some examples to make things a bit easier.
skärgård
1 words
Thus far, we have learned that the Swedish present tense covers both the English simple present (e.g. 'I eat') and the English present continuous ('I am eating'). While this is correct, we are going to nuance this a little bit.
In Swedish, there are certain constructions emphasizing a continuous action - and which correspond to the English present continuous (i.e. the -ing form).
håller på is used when the continuity is strong and we want to emphasize this. It is followed by att plus an infinitive. You will likely also come across it with och plus the present tense, but this is colloquial and not accepted in the course.
Jag håller på att lära mig svenska. 'I am (in the process of) learning Swedish.'
If the emphasis is less strong, but the markedness is still desired, we can use one of the verbs sitter/ligger/står together with another present tense verb. This is equal to the English present continuous, but different in the sense that not only does it mark continuity, it also marks the position of the subject.
Jag ligger och läser. 'I am (lying and) reading.'
Jag sitter och tittar på teve. 'I am (sitting and) watching television.'
Jag står och lagar mat just nu. 'I am (standing and) cooking right now'
absolut · allmänhet · definitivt · dit · faktiskt · heller · helt · långsamt · möjligtvis · nära · närvarande · nästan · nödvändigtvis · precis · slut · snart · särskilt · tillräckligt · troligtvis · tydligt · ungefär · vanligtvis · var · varken · äntligen
25 words
konversation
1 words
basket · fotbollsplanen · golf · idrott · klubba · loppet · slår · tränare · turnering
9 words
In Swedish, it is very common that words change depending on whether it describes a position or a direction. You have already encountered the two words for where in Swedish; Var (position) & Vart (direction), but now it is time to expand on the subject. The following table summarizes the most important words:
English | Position | Direction |
---|---|---|
Here | Här | Hit |
There | Där | Dit |
Up | Uppe | Upp |
Down | Nere | Ned/Ner |
Home | Hemma | Hem |
Let’s make things a bit clearer with a few examples:
”I am here” - Jag är här
”She is coming here” - Hon kommer hit
“He is there” – Han är där
”I am going there” - Jag går dit
”She is up on the roof” - Hon är uppe på taket
“You climb up on the roof” - Du klättrar upp på taket
“She is down on the first floor” - Hon är nere på den första våningen
”He jumps down from the roof” - Han hoppar ned/ner från taket
“We are not at home” - Vi är inte hemma
“They are going home” - De åker hem
Framme is a peculiar word which translates to “there” in English, but it has notions of both position and direction. It is usually used when talking about the destination, either while going there, or after having reached it. Sounds confusing? Maybe a few examples can make it clearer.
“Are we there yet?” - Är vi framme snart?
“We are there now” - Vi är framme nu
In the first example we are talking about the destination while being on our way.
In the second example we have reached the destination after having finished the journey. It essentially means “We have arrived”.
Förbi is used when something is passing by something else, and could be used both for time and space. I.e:
“The car drives by the school” - Bilen kör förbi skolan
“Our time has passed” - Vår tid är förbi
In many cases where English uses a preposition to describe directions, Swedish would rather add a suffix to indicate the same meaning. For example:
Uppifrån – From above
Uppåt - (To) up
Uppför - Uphill (or up along)
band · fiol · flöjt · hjälten · ljud · pianot · rund · trummor
8 words
Speaking about body parts, this is a good place to point out that in English, you always refer to your body parts with possessive pronouns. In Swedish however, we usually think that it is enough to use the determinate form of the noun.
Compare:
Jag borstar tänderna - I am brushing my teeth
It is not wrong to say Jag borstar mina tänder in Swedish, but that's not the idiomatic way of saying it.
Read more about how to speak about body parts here.
ihjäl
1 words
intervjuar · journalist · journalisten · kommunikation · meningen · nyheter · nätet · stulen · stängda · uppäten · öppnade
11 words
inbjuden · irriterat · misslyckat · stängd · uppätna · överraskad
6 words
The passive participle (or perfekt particip) is normally used to say that something has happened to an object, and that the action is finished. So it has both a passive meaning and a past tense meaning.
There are a few patterns for how they are created, e.g.:
The passive participle behaves like an adjective: it changes for number and gender.
bestämt · blivande · döende · flygande · fungerande · fått · givande · gående · ha · hittat · hängande · irriterande · kommande · kommer · lekande · levande · liggande · lärt · passande · ringt · simmande · sittande · skickat · sovande · springande · tagit · talande · överraskande
28 words
Future perfect is the tense that describes an action that will be completed at a certain point in the future. This tense is easy beacuse it works just the same way in Swedish as in English. Just pay attention to the Swedish word order:
Swedish | English | |
---|---|---|
Jag kommer att ha hittat den i morgon. | I will have found it tomorrow. | |
I morgon kommer jag att ha hittat den | Tomorrow I will have found it. |
When the adverb (i morgon, tomorrow) comes first in the clause, the word order in Swedish is inverted, since the verb must be in second place.
ytliga
1 words
What is the conditional?
"The conditional" is just a fancy way to say that we are talking about "would" phrases -- anything that would happen or could have happened or would have happened.
How do we form the conditional?
We use the word skulle much like we use the word "would" in English. All you have to do is add skulle before the verb infinitive! Easy peasy!
Example:
Jag skulle läsa om hon lyssnade.
I would read if she listened.
You can do the same thing in more complex constructions. "Would have" can be directly translated to skulle ha, which is followed by the perfect form of the verb (like läst or kommit), just as in English.
Example: Jag skulle ha läst om hon hade lyssnat. I would have read if she had listened.
Vore
Vore is the conditional form of the verb vara -- to be. It is actually derived from the archaic past subjunctive mood that once existed in Swedish (and still does in a few set expressions). Although there are some nuances, for now you can use vore just as you would use skulle + any other verb. Because vore already includes the conditional aspect, it would be redundant (and grammatically incorrect) to say skulle vore.
anden · bad · be · böner · gud · gudinna · helige · spöken · tro
9 words
av · bakad · bars · behandlade · byggdes · byggs · börja · flyttas · förhörda · höjas · höjs · komma · kritiserades · kritiseras · ritade · skulle · tryckt · tryckta · träffa · väljs · älskas · åka
22 words
Future preterite can be described as the future seen from the past. It is used when speaking about something you were planning at a point of time in the past, or something you thought was going to happen. The forms are the same as for the conditional, skulle + infinitive, but the meaning is not the same.
Example:
När vi skulle åka upptäckte vi att bilen var stulen .
When we were going to go, we discovered that the car was stolen.
The people in this sentence discovered that their car was stolen at a point in time where their leaving had not yet happened – they were going to go, the leaving was still in the future for them.
investering · styrelsens
2 words
champagne · grattis · helgdag · helgdagar · läsken · nationaldag · nationaldagen · nyår · smörgåsbord
9 words