Language/Icelandic/Grammar/Verbs
Verbs are conjugated for tense, mood, person, number, and voice.
There are three voices: active, passive and middle (or medial), but it may be debated whether the middle voice is a voice or simply an independent class of verbs of its own. Examples are koma ("come") vs. komast ("get there"), drepa ("kill") vs. drepast ("perish ignominiously") and taka ("take") vs. takast ("manage to"). In each of these examples, the meaning has been so altered, that one can hardly see them as the same verb in different voices.
There are four moods in Icelandic: indicative, imperative, conditional, and subjunctive.
Strictly speaking, there are only two simple tenses in Icelandic, simple present and simple past. All other tenses are formed using auxiliary constructions (some of these are regarded as tenses, others as aspects). For example, the present continuous is formed like this:
vera + að + infinitive verb
ég er að læra - I am learning (literal translation - I am to learn)
The collective tenses, formed with the use of auxiliary verbs, are: conditional, future, past (continuous, perfect, subjunctive), present (continuous, perfect, subjunctive).
The basic word order in Icelandic is subject – verb - object. However, as words are heavily inflected, the word order is fairly flexible and any combination may occur in poetry: SVO, SOV, VSO, VOS, OSV, and OVS are all allowed for metrical purposes.
However, as with most Germanic languages, Icelandic usually complies with the V2 word order restriction, so the conjugated verb in Icelandic usually appears as the second element in the clause, preceded by the word or phrase being emphasized.
Take some time to dive into these other pages after completing this lesson: Negation, How to Use Be & Adjectives.
Sources
Book: Learn to Speak Icelandic: without even trying, Stephen Hernandez
Videos
Icelandic Grammar: Impersonal Verbs - YouTube
Icelandic Verbs: Strong Verbs 1 - YouTube
Other Lessons
- Articles
- Adverbs
- Questions
- Definite Article
- Pronouns
- Prepositions
- Prepostitions
- Plurals
- Nouns
- Icelandic Articles
- Gender
- Conditional Mood
- Adjectives
- Negation