can be translated as one, we, they or the people in general. When referring to nouns as
for ett nouns. Formerly,
was the formal, but these distinctions are rarely used anymore. The forms in parentheses are the informal ways of spelling these words, which is closer to the actual pronunciation.
Nouns in Swedish have two genders, common and neuter, which adjectives must agree with when modifying nouns. These genders are signified by the indefinite articles:
. In the vocabulary lists, a noun followed by (n) means that it is a neuter noun and it takes the indefinite article ett. The majority of nouns in Swedish are common gender, so they take the indefinite article en.
The only case of nouns that is used in Swedish is the genitive (showing possession), and it is easily formed by adding an -s to the noun. This is comparable to adding -‘s in English to show possession. However, if the noun already ends in -s, then you add nothing (unlike English where we add -‘ or -‘s).
(there). The noun is always in the definite form after these demonstratives. And if any adjectives follow the demonstrative, they must add an -a to the ending.
Here are some common Swedish phrases for general conversation with people you already know.
Swedish Question Words
who |
vem |
whose |
vems |
what |
vad |
which |
vilken, vilket, vilka |
why |
varför |
where to |
vart |
when |
när |
where from |
varifrån |
where |
var |
how |
hur |
Which has three different forms depending on the gender and number of the noun that follows it.
Vilken is used with en words, vilket is used with ett words and vilka is used with plural words.
Yes/No questions: Invert the subject and verb so that the verb begins the question.
Arbetar han? Does he work?
Regnar det? Is it raining?
Question Words: The question word begins the question, and the verb comes next, followed by the subject.
Var bor Sten? Where does Sten live?
Vad gör Elsa? What does Elsa do?
There are three different word order structures to follow in the Swedish language: the traditional word order of the main clause, the inverted word order of the main clause, and the word order of the subordinate clause.
A main clause contains an independent thought and can form a grammatically acceptable and understandable sentence on its own. A subordinate clause adds information to the main clause or specifies something in the main clause, and it does not work on its own without the main clause.
The traditional word order of the main clause follows a basic pattern where the first element of the sentence is a subject, followed closely by a verb and an object (SVO). Qualifiers such as negative words (
inte, ej) and specific adverbs (
alltid, kanske, redan) are usually placed after the first verb. At the end of the sentence, additional information on how something was done (
tydligt), where it was done (
i sängen) and when (
på morgonen), can also be included.
The traditional word order in a nutshell: subject, verb, qualifier, object, how, where, when.
Jenny köpte en ny bok i går. Jenny bought a new book yesterday.
Hon vill inte äta frukost hemma i morgon. She doesn’t want to eat breakfast at home tomorrow.
The inverted word order of the main clause is needed when the sentence starts with something else than a subject, for example with an expression describing a place or a time. In an inverted word order the subject and the verb change places (VSO).
The inverted word order in a nutshell: alternate expression, verb, subject, qualifier, object, how, where, when.
Där lyssnade vi alltid på rockmusik. There we always listened to rock music.
Idag har jag inte haft tid att laga mat. Today I haven’t had time to cook (food).
The word order of the subordinate clause is near identical to that of the traditional main clause word order (SVO). The main difference is that the qualifier comes before the verb and not after it. A subordinate clause usually starts with a conjunction or a similar structure.
The word order of a subordinate clause in a nutshell: conjunction, subject, qualifier, verb, object, how, where, when.
In the following examples, the beginning of the subordinate clause has been bolded.
Det är kul att jag redan kan gå hem. It’s nice that I can already go home.
Det är någonting som Jesse inte förstår. It’s something that Jesse doesn’t understand.
Swedish Verbs to Be & to Have
The present and past tenses of verbs in Swedish are very simple to conjugate. All the forms are the same for each personal pronoun. The infinitive of the verb
to be in Swedish is
vara, and the conjugated present tense form is
är and the past tense is
var. The infinitive of the verb
to have is
ha, and the conjugated present tense form is
har and the past tense is
hade.
att vara – to be
|
att ha – to have
|
I am |
jag är |
I was |
jag var |
I have |
jag har |
I had |
jag hade |
you are |
du är |
you were |
du var |
you have |
du har |
you had |
du hade |
he is |
han är |
he was |
han var |
he has |
han har |
he had |
han hade |
she is |
hon är |
she was |
hon var |
she has |
hon har |
she had |
hon hade |
it is |
den är |
it was |
den var |
it has |
den har |
it had |
den hade |
it is |
det är |
it was |
det var |
it has |
det har |
it had |
det hade |
one is |
man är |
one was |
man var |
one has |
man har |
one had |
man hade |
we are |
vi är |
we were |
vi var |
we have |
vi har |
we had |
vi hade |
you are |
ni är |
you were |
ni var |
you have |
ni har |
you had |
ni hade |
they are |
de är |
they were |
de var |
they have |
de har |
they had |
de hade |
To form the future tense of verbs, just add ska before the infinitive. Jag ska vara = I will be; hon ska ha = she will have; etc.
Professions in Swedish:
actor |
skådespelare |
judge |
domare |
actress |
skådespelerska |
lawyer |
advokat |
author |
författare |
mechanic |
mekaniker, montör |
baker |
bagare |
musician |
musiker |
baker’s shop |
bageri |
nurse |
sjuksköterska |
bookseller |
bokhandlare |
official |
ämbetsman |
bookshop |
bokaffär |
optician (eye doctor) |
optiker |
businessman |
affärsman |
painter |
målare |
butcher |
slaktare |
photographer |
fotograf |
pharmacist |
farmaceut |
policeman |
polis |
pharmacy |
apotek (n) |
postman |
brevbärare |
cook |
kock, kokerska |
priest |
präst |
customer |
kund |
publisher |
förläggare |
dentist |
tandläkare |
scientist |
vetenskapsman |
doctor |
läkare, doktor |
shoemaker |
skomakare |
employee |
anställd, arbetstagare |
shop, store |
butik |
engineer |
ingenjör |
singer |
sångare, sångerska |
fisherman |
fiskare |
student |
student |
gardener |
trädgårdsmästare |
surgeon |
kirurg |
hairdresser |
hårfrisör |
tailor |
skräddare |
jeweler |
juvelerare |
teacher |
lärare |
journalist |
journalist |
workman |
arbetare |
Swedish Days of the Week / Veckans dagar
Monday |
måndag |
Tuesday |
tisdag |
Wednesday |
onsdag |
Thursday |
torsdag |
Friday |
fredag |
Saturday |
lördag |
Sunday |
söndag |
day |
dag |
morning |
morgon |
afternoon |
eftermiddag |
evening |
afton (before 6 pm) / kväll |
night |
natt |
today |
idag |
tomorrow |
imorgon |
day after tomorrow |
i övermorgon |
tonight |
ikväll |
yesterday |
igår |
day before yesterday |
i förrgår |
last night |
igår natt |
week |
vecka |
weekend |
helg |
daily |
daglig |
weekly |
veckolig |
To say “on” a certain day, use
på before the day.
Swedish Months of the Year
January |
januari |
February |
februari |
March |
mars |
April |
april |
May |
maj |
June |
juni |
July |
juli |
August |
augusti |
September |
september |
October |
oktober |
November |
november |
December |
december |
month |
månad |
year |
år |
monthly |
månatlig / varje månad |
yearly |
årlig |
To say “in” a certain month, use
i before the month.
Swedish Verbs: To Do/Make & To Become
göra – to do/make
|
bli – to become
|
present |
gör
|
blir
|
past |
gjorde
|
blev
|
future |
ska göra
|
ska bli
|
Use of göra in short answers
A yes/no question can be answered with a short phrase, just as in English. The verb
göra (to do/make) is used with the pronoun
det and the subject of the question. Some verbs are not replaced by
göra and are repeated in the short answer, such as
vara and
ha. This is very similar to English, except for the word order.
Positive Short Answer:
Ja +
det +
Verb +
Subject
Negative Short Answer:
Nej + det + Verb + Subject + inte
Arbetar hon här? Does she work here?
Ja, det gör hon. Yes, she does.
Nej, det gör hon inte. No, she doesn’t.
Är de glada? Are they happy?
Ja, det är de. Yes, they are.
Nej, det är de inte. No, they are not.
Swedish Seasons
Winter |
vinter |
in (the) winter |
på vintern |
Spring |
vår |
in (the) spring |
på våren |
Summer |
sommar |
in (the) summer |
på sommaren |
Fall |
höst |
in (the) fall |
på hösten |
You can also use
i before the names of the seasons to express
this:
i vinter = this winter
Swedish Directions
North |
norr |
Northeast |
nordost |
South |
söder |
Northwest |
nordväst |
East |
öster |
Southeast |
sydost |
West |
väster |
Southwest |
sydväst |
|
|
|
|
left |
till vänster |
|
|
right |
till höger |
|
|
straight ahead |
rakt fram |
|
|
Swedish Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns
with en words |
with ett words |
with plural words |
my / mine |
min |
mitt |
mina |
your / yours |
din |
ditt |
dina |
his / her / its / their |
sin |
sitt |
sina |
his / his |
hans |
hans |
hans |
her / hers |
hennes |
hennes |
hennes |
its / its |
dess |
dess |
dess |
our / ours |
vår |
vårt |
våra |
your / yours |
er |
ert |
era |
their / theirs |
deras |
deras |
deras |
The same forms are used for possessive adjectives that are used directly before nouns and for possessive pronouns that replace a noun. For example,
this is my car and
this is mine would be translated as
det här är min bil and
det här är min.
Sin, sitt and
sina can only be used when the third person possessive adjective refers to the subject of the same clause. These words can be translated as
his, her, its or their. Generally, if you cannot insert “own” after the possessive adjective in English, you cannot use sin/sitt/sina.
Per besöker
sin mamma. = Per visits his (own) mother. (Sin refers back to Per.)
Eva ringer hans mamma. = Eva calls his mother. (Hans refers to Per, not Eva.)
Swedish Verbs: To Do/Make & To Become
göra – to do/make
|
bli – to become
|
present |
gör
|
blir
|
past |
gjorde
|
blev
|
future |
ska göra
|
ska bli
|
Use of göra in short answers
A yes/no question can be answered with a short phrase, just as in English. The verb
göra (to do/make) is used with the pronoun
det and the subject of the question. Some verbs are not replaced by
göra and are repeated in the short answer, such as
vara and
ha. This is very similar to English, except for the word order.
Positive Short Answer:
Ja +
det +
Verb +
Subject
Negative Short Answer:
Nej + det + Verb + Subject + inte
Arbetar hon här? Does she work here?
Ja, det gör hon. Yes, she does.
Nej, det gör hon inte. No, she doesn’t.
Är de glada? Are they happy?
Ja, det är de. Yes, they are.
Nej, det är de inte. No, they are not.
Swedish Prepositions
vid |
by, at, next to |
av |
of, by, with |
i |
in |
bakom |
behind |
på |
on, in, at |
bland |
among |
hos |
at the house of |
bredvid |
beside |
till |
to |
efter |
after, for |
från |
from |
enligt |
according to |
genom |
through, by |
framför |
in front of |
längs |
along |
för |
for, by, with |
över |
across, over |
omkring |
around |
mot |
towards, to |
med |
with, by |
mellan |
between |
under |
under, below |
om |
around, about, in |
utan |
without |
sedan |
since |
utom |
except for |
trots |
in spite of |
åt |
towards, for |
Vid is used to express a position next to something, but with no contact.
I is used to express a position in something that is seen to have volume (room, containers, etc.); and it is also used with countries, cities, villages, etc.
På is used to express a position on something that is seen as a line or surface with contact; and it is also used with islands, addresses, and particular places, such as bank, post office, cinema, hospital, library, etc. Three exceptions to using på with particular places include school, the shop and church:
i skolan, i affären, i kyrkan.
Swedish Modal Verbs
kunna – to be able to, can
|
vilja – to want to
|
få – to be allowed to
|
— have to, must
|
present |
kan
|
vill
|
får
|
måste
|
past |
kunde
|
ville
|
fick
|
—
|
Just as in English, there is no past form of must / måste. You can either use var tvungen or behövde instead, as in jag var tvungen att … = I had to…
|
skola – supposed to, will, should
|
böra- should, ought to
|
bruka – usually, used to
|
behöva – need to
|
present |
ska
|
bör
|
brukar
|
behöver
|
past |
skulle
|
borde
|
brukade
|
behövde
|
Vi kan tala engelska. We can speak English.
Han kunde inte spela. He could not play.
Sven vill sova. Sven wants to sleep.
Hon vill ha kaffe. She wants coffee. (When
vilja is followed by a noun,
ha is added before the noun.)
Du får röka. You may smoke.
De måste gå hem nu. They must go home now.
Du får inte röka. You must not smoke. (
Must not is translated with
får inte rather than
måste inte, which means don’t have to.)
Jag brukar dricka kaffe efter lunch. I usually drink coffee after lunch. (
Brukar in the present tense means
usually + main verb.)
Conjugating Regular Verbs in Swedish in the Present and Past Tenses
Infinitives in Swedish end in -a. When conjugating verbs, the same form is used for all subject pronouns, whether singular or plural. To form the present tense of verbs, either
add -r to the infinitive or
remove the -a and
add -er.
tala – to speak (-ar verb) and stänga – to close (-er verb)
Present Tense
|
Past Tense
|
Present Tense
|
Past Tense
|
jag talar |
I speak |
jag talade |
I spoke |
jag stänger |
I close |
jag stängde |
I closed |
du talar |
you speak |
du talade |
you spoke |
du stänger |
you close |
du stängde |
you closed |
han talar |
he speaks |
han talade |
he spoke |
han stänger |
he closes |
han stängde |
he closed |
hon talar |
she speaks |
hon talade |
she spoke |
hon stänger |
she closes |
hon stängde |
she closed |
vi talar |
we speak |
vi talade |
we spoke |
vi stänger |
we close |
vi stängde |
we closed |
ni talar |
you speak |
ni talade |
you spoke |
ni stänger |
you close |
ni stängde |
you closed |
de talar |
they speak |
de talade |
they spoke |
de stänger |
they close |
de stängde |
they closed |
Please note the three present tenses in English (simple, progressive and emphatic) are all translated by one verb form in Swedish.
Jag talar can mean
I speak, I am speaking or
I do speak.
Four Past Tense Conjugations
To form the past tense, most verbs add -de to the present tense form of -ar verbs and to the stem of -er verbs (infinitive minus -a). But if the stem ends in a voiceless consonant (k, p, t, or s), then add -te instead. Another group of verbs, short verbs ending in a vowel, add -dde to form the past tense.
|
Infinitive
|
|
Present
|
Past
|
Infinitive of -ar verbs; add -de |
arbeta |
to work |
arbetar |
arbetade |
fråga |
to ask |
frågar |
frågade |
öppna |
to open |
öppnar |
öppnade |
tala |
to speak |
talar |
talade |
Stem of -er verbs; add -de |
ringa |
to ring |
ringer |
ringde |
stänga |
to close |
stänger |
stängde |
följa |
to follow |
följer |
följde |
bygga |
to build |
bygger |
byggde |
Stem ends in k, p, t, or s; add -te |
tänka |
to think |
tänker |
tänkte |
röka |
to smoke |
röker |
rökte |
läsa |
to read |
läser |
läste |
köpa |
to buy |
köper |
köpte |
Infinitive ends in long vowel; add -dde |
tro |
to believe |
tror |
trodde |
bo |
to live, dwell |
bor |
bodde |
Negative Sentences
To make a sentence negative in Swedish, simply add
inte after the verb. If there is an auxiliary verb and a main verb,
inte goes between the two.
In addition, if you answer “yes” to a negative question, you must use
jo instead of
ja.
Swedish Reflexive Verbs
Some verbs in Swedish are reflexive verbs, in that the action by the subject is performed by itself. This is comparable to the -self or -selves pronouns used in English with some verbs, such as he behaves himself. Most of the time, verbs that are reflexive in Swedish are not reflexive in English. To conjugate these verbs, simply add these pronouns after the verb:
mig (mej) |
myself |
oss |
ourselves |
dig (dej) |
yourself |
er |
yourselves |
sig (sej) |
himself/herself/itself |
sig (sej) |
theirselves |
The forms in parentheses are used in colloquial (spoken and written) Swedish. In fact, mig, dig and sig are pronounced as if they were writtenmej, dej and sej.
Swedish Conjunctions
Coordinating Conjunctions
och |
and |
eller |
or |
men |
but |
för |
because, for |
så |
so |
som |
as |
antingen…eller |
either…or |
varken…eller |
neither…nor |
Subordinating Conjunctions
att |
that |
då |
when |
eftersom |
because, as |
för att |
in order to, so that |
därför att |
because |
innan / förrän |
before |
medan |
while |
när |
when |
om |
if, whether (interrogation) |
fast |
even if, although |
sedan |
since, as |
nu då |
now that |
Swedish Present and Past Perfect Tenses
The present and past perfect tenses consist of two parts: har / hade and the supine form of the main verb. This is a compound tense that corresponds to has/have / had and a past participle in English. The main difference between Swedish and English in this tense, however, is that Swedish uses the supine form of the verb instead of the past participle.
To form the supine, -ar verbs add -t to the infinitive; while -er verbs replace -a with -t in the infinitive. Infinitives ending in long vowels add -tt to form the supine.
Infinitive
|
|
Present
|
Past
|
Supine
|
arbeta |
to work |
arbetar |
arbetade |
arbetat |
fråga |
to ask |
frågar |
frågade |
frågat |
öppna |
to open |
öppnar |
öppnade |
öppnat |
tala |
to speak |
talar |
talade |
talat |
ringa |
to ring |
ringer |
ringde |
ringt |
stänga |
to close |
stänger |
stängde |
stängt |
följa |
to follow |
följer |
följde |
följt |
bygga |
to build |
bygger |
byggde |
byggt |
tänka |
to think |
tänker |
tänkte |
tänkt |
röka |
to smoke |
röker |
rökte |
rökt |
läsa |
to read |
läser |
läste |
läst |
köpa |
to buy |
köper |
köpte |
köpt |
tro |
to believe |
tror |
trodde |
trott |
bo |
to live, dwell |
bor |
bodde |
bott |
Jag har läst boken. I have read the book.
Hon hade öppnat dörren. She had opened the door.
List of common regular verbs
First conjugation
att + infinitiv |
presens |
imperfekt |
supinum |
imperativ |
Translation |
att dansa |
dansar |
dansade |
dansat |
dansa! |
to dance |
att hoppa |
hoppar |
hoppade |
hoppat |
hoppa! |
to jump |
att spela |
spelar |
spelade |
spelat |
spela! |
to play |
att träna |
tränar |
tränade |
tränat |
träna! |
to train/work out |
att visa |
visar |
visade |
visat |
visa! |
to show |
Second conjugation (-er)
Conjugation 2a (-er, -de, -t)
att + infinitiv |
presens |
imperfekt |
supinum |
imperativ |
Translation |
att förlänga |
förlänger |
förlängde |
förlängt |
förläng! |
to prolong |
att hänga |
hänger |
hängde |
hängt |
häng! |
to hang |
att ringa |
ringer |
ringde |
ringt |
ring! |
to ring |
att stänga |
stänger |
stängde |
stängt |
stäng! |
to close |
Conjugation 2b (-er, -te, -t)
att + infinitiv |
presens |
imperfekt |
supinum |
imperativ |
Translation |
att leka |
leker |
lekte |
lekt |
lek! |
to play |
att steka |
steker |
stekte |
stekt |
stek! |
to fry |
att tycka |
tycker |
tyckte |
tyckt |
tyck! |
to think (opinion) |
att tänka |
tänker |
tänkte |
tänkt |
tänk! |
to think (use brain/opinions) |
Third conjugation
att + infinitiv |
presens |
imperfekt |
supinum |
imperativ |
Translation |
att gro |
gror |
grodde |
grott |
gro! |
to grow |
att sy |
syr |
sydde |
sytt |
sy! |
to sew |
Swedish Language