Difference between revisions of "Language/Swedish/Grammar/Sentense-Structure"

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A main sentence can always stand alone. The meaning of the sentence is clear without further explanation. Subject and predicate (=verb) stand together. The predicate (=Verb) always stays on the 2nd place.
A main sentence can always stand alone. The meaning of the sentence is clear without further explanation. Subject and predicate (=verb) stand together. The predicate (=Verb) always stays on the 2nd place.


a)     '''A regular Swedish main sentence''' follows the rule '''SPORT''':
==='''A regular Swedish main sentence''' follows the rule '''SPORT''':===


'''S'''ubject – Predicate (=Verb) – '''O'''bject – '''R'''um (=place) – '''T'''id (=time)
'''S'''ubject – Predicate (=Verb) – '''O'''bject – '''R'''um (=place) – '''T'''id (=time)
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Jag (S) läser (P) en bok (O) i mitt rum (R) idag (T). / I read a book in my room today.
Jag (S) läser (P) en bok (O) i mitt rum (R) idag (T). / I read a book in my room today.


b)     '''An irregular Swedish main sentence''' can begin with O/R/T, so '''the word order changes''':
==='''An irregular Swedish main sentence''' can begin with O/R/T, so '''the word order changes''':===


'''Let’s start with the object''' '''O'''-P-S-R-T: '''En bok''' '''(O)''' läser (P) jag (S) i mitt rum (R) idag (T)./ '''A book''' do I read in my room today.
'''Let’s start with the object''' '''O'''-P-S-R-T: '''En bok''' '''(O)''' läser (P) jag (S) i mitt rum (R) idag (T)./ '''A book''' do I read in my room today.
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By changing the word order from SPORT to these, do you '''emphazise the fat marked words''' of the sentence.
By changing the word order from SPORT to these, do you '''emphazise the fat marked words''' of the sentence.


'''2.       Mainsentence and adverb'''
==Mainsentence and adverb==


An adverb is inte=not, ofta=often, alltid=always, alldrig=never, ofta=often, sällan=seldom etc.. It specifies the verb that is used in the sentence.
An adverb is inte=not, ofta=often, alltid=always, alldrig=never, ofta=often, sällan=seldom etc.. It specifies the verb that is used in the sentence.


a)     A regular Swedish main sentence follows the rule '''SPORT plus an adverb SP(a)ORT''':
===A regular Swedish main sentence follows the rule '''SPORT plus an adverb SP(a)ORT===


'''S'''ubject – Predicate (=Verb) – '''a'''dverb - '''O'''bject – '''R'''um (=place) – '''T'''id (=time)
'''S'''ubject – Predicate (=Verb) – '''a'''dverb - '''O'''bject – '''R'''um (=place) – '''T'''id (=time)
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As in English the adverb specifies the verb, so they stand in a regular '''SP(a)ORT'''-main sentence always together. But note in Swedish comes the adverb always '''after''' the Predicate (=verb).
As in English the adverb specifies the verb, so they stand in a regular '''SP(a)ORT'''-main sentence always together. But note in Swedish comes the adverb always '''after''' the Predicate (=verb).


b)     '''An irregular Swedish main sentence plus an adverb''':
==='''An irregular Swedish main sentence plus an adverb'''===


Let’s start with the object '''O'''-P-S-'''(a)-'''R-T: '''En bok (O)''' läser (P) jag (S) '''inte (a)''' i mitt rum (R) idag (T)./ '''A book''' do I not read in my room today.
Let’s start with the object '''O'''-P-S-'''(a)-'''R-T: '''En bok (O)''' läser (P) jag (S) '''inte (a)''' i mitt rum (R) idag (T)./ '''A book''' do I not read in my room today.
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In Swedish '''a komma is seldom used''', but can be there as an indicator that a subclause is coming. The safest way is to '''identify the subjunction''' which must be there to introduce the subclause.
In Swedish '''a komma is seldom used''', but can be there as an indicator that a subclause is coming. The safest way is to '''identify the subjunction''' which must be there to introduce the subclause.


a)     '''Mainsentence, followed by subclause'''
==='''Mainsentence, followed by subclause'''===


Jag läser en bok idag, medan jag är i mitt rum. / I read a book today while I am in my room.
Jag läser en bok idag, medan jag är i mitt rum. / I read a book today while I am in my room.
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Followed by the '''subclause''', which specifies the mainclause and cannot stand alone. It starts with a '''subjunction''', here “medan= while”, sometimes there is also a '''komma''' befor it:''', medan''' jag är i mitt rum.
Followed by the '''subclause''', which specifies the mainclause and cannot stand alone. It starts with a '''subjunction''', here “medan= while”, sometimes there is also a '''komma''' befor it:''', medan''' jag är i mitt rum.


b)     '''Subclause first''', followed by mainsentence
==='''Subclause first''', followed by mainsentence===


You can put the subclause first place. Then '''the word order changes in the mainsentence'''.
You can put the subclause first place. Then '''the word order changes in the mainsentence'''.
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'''So, now, we add an adverb to the sentence.'''
'''So, now, we add an adverb to the sentence.'''


a)     '''Mainsentence, followed by subclause'''
==='''Mainsentence, followed by subclause'''===


Jag läser en bok idag, medan jag '''inte''' är i mitt rum. / I read a book today while I am in my room.
Jag läser en bok idag, medan jag '''inte''' är i mitt rum. / I read a book today while I am in my room.
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But note in the subclause that the adverb comes always after the subject like this '''S (=subjunction)-S(ubject)-a(dverb)-''' '''predicate (=verb)-O/R/T:''' medan '''jag inte''' är i mitt rum.
But note in the subclause that the adverb comes always after the subject like this '''S (=subjunction)-S(ubject)-a(dverb)-''' '''predicate (=verb)-O/R/T:''' medan '''jag inte''' är i mitt rum.


b)     '''Subclause first''', followed by mainsentence
==='''Subclause first''', followed by mainsentence===


Remember: the word order of the subclause never changes, so the adverb stays again after the subject.
Remember: the word order of the subclause never changes, so the adverb stays again after the subject.

Revision as of 22:35, 23 May 2021

Sentence Structure in Swedish
Sentence Structure in Swedish

.

Hello everybody,

In today's lesson you will learn the ¨SENTENCE STRUCTURE¨ in Swedish

Feel free to edit this page if you think it can be improved!



Subject-verb-object

Each language has a particular sentence structure and they are all built up by grammatical functions:

  • Subject --> the person/animal/thing doing something
  • Verb --> what the person/animal/thing is doing
  • Object --> who/what is being affected by what the subject is doing


.

Simple word order

In Swedish, the sentence structure is built with SUBJECT-VERB-OBJECT. We call it "simple word order."

Example

Jag läser en bok (I read a book)

  • To know the subject, ask yourself: Who is reading? --> "Jag", so "jag" is the subject.
  • To know the verb, ask yourself: What is "jag" doing? --> "Läser", so "läser" is the verb.
  • To know the object, ask yourself: What is being read? --> "En bok", so "en bok" is the object.


.

Reversed word order

Swedish also has something called "reversed word order" which means that if something else than the subject comes first in a sentence, we have to move the verb to the second position.

Example

  • Jag läser en bok

(S) (V) (O)

  • I dag läser jag en bok (Today I read a book)

(V) (S) (O)

Do you see that "läser" and "jag" have switched places? A good tip is to think that the verb ALWAYS should be in the second position in a sentence.

Mainsentence

A main sentence can always stand alone. The meaning of the sentence is clear without further explanation. Subject and predicate (=verb) stand together. The predicate (=Verb) always stays on the 2nd place.

A regular Swedish main sentence follows the rule SPORT:

Subject – Predicate (=Verb) – Object – Rum (=place) – Tid (=time)

Jag (S) läser (P) en bok (O) i mitt rum (R) idag (T). / I read a book in my room today.

An irregular Swedish main sentence can begin with O/R/T, so the word order changes:

Let’s start with the object O-P-S-R-T: En bok (O) läser (P) jag (S) i mitt rum (R) idag (T)./ A book do I read in my room today.

Let’s go on  with the rum R-P-S-O-T: I mitt rum (R) läser (P) jag (S) en bok (O) idag (T). / In my room do I read a book today.

And the tid in the beginning T-P-S-O-R. Idag (T) läser (P) jag (S) en bok (O) I mitt rum (R)./Today do I read a book in my room.

By changing the word order from SPORT to these, do you emphazise the fat marked words of the sentence.

Mainsentence and adverb

An adverb is inte=not, ofta=often, alltid=always, alldrig=never, ofta=often, sällan=seldom etc.. It specifies the verb that is used in the sentence.

A regular Swedish main sentence follows the rule SPORT plus an adverb SP(a)ORT

Subject – Predicate (=Verb) – adverb - Object – Rum (=place) – Tid (=time)

Jag (S) läser (P) inte (a) en bok (O) i mitt rum (R) idag (T). / I do not read a book in my room today.

As in English the adverb specifies the verb, so they stand in a regular SP(a)ORT-main sentence always together. But note in Swedish comes the adverb always after the Predicate (=verb).

An irregular Swedish main sentence plus an adverb

Let’s start with the object O-P-S-(a)-R-T: En bok (O) läser (P) jag (S) inte (a) i mitt rum (R) idag (T)./ A book do I not read in my room today.

Let’s go on  with the rum R-P-S-(a)-O-T: I mitt rum (R) läser (P) jag (S) inte (a) en bok (O) idag (T). / In my room do I not read a book today.

And the tid in the beginning T-P-S-(a)-O-R. Idag (T) läser (P) jag (S) inte (a) en bok (O) I mitt rum (R)./Today do I not read a book in my room.

The adverb in a regular SPORT-main sentence always comes after the Predicate (=verb): SP(a)ORT. The adverb specifies the verb, so they stand together.

In an irregular Swedish main sentence, beginning with O/R/T the word order changes. So is the adverb. The adverb stands now always together with the Subject, so O/R/T-P-S-(a).

But note: in all mainsentences (regular/irregular/ + adverb) stands the predicate (=verb) at the 2nd place. And subject and predicate (=verb) stand together either like this in the regular mainsentence (S-P) or in the irregular mainsentence (P-S). 

Mainsentence and Subclause

A subclause begins with a subjunction like därför att/för att/eftersom = because, trots att/fast/fastän = although, att=that, genom att= thus, för att = in order to, utan att= ohne dass, medan= while, sedan = afterwards, när = when, om = if etc.

The subclause specifies the mainsentence, the subclause can never stand alone, so there must be a mainsentence.

The sentence structure of the subclause never changes, if the whole sentence starts with the mainsentence or the subclause is unimportant, it stays the same. The word order in a subclause is always like this: (,)-Subjunction-Subject- Predicate (=Verb)-O/R/T.

In Swedish a komma is seldom used, but can be there as an indicator that a subclause is coming. The safest way is to identify the subjunction which must be there to introduce the subclause.

Mainsentence, followed by subclause

Jag läser en bok idag, medan jag är i mitt rum. / I read a book today while I am in my room.

So, let’s identify the mainsentence, which can stand alone: Jag läser en bok idag./ I read a book today.

Followed by the subclause, which specifies the mainclause and cannot stand alone. It starts with a subjunction, here “medan= while”, sometimes there is also a komma befor it:, medan jag är i mitt rum.

Subclause first, followed by mainsentence

You can put the subclause first place. Then the word order changes in the mainsentence.

Let’s try it: Subclause 1st place: Medan jag är i mitt rum, (mainsentence) läser (2nd place) jag en bok idag.

So the wordorder in the subclause stays always the same: Subjunction-Subject- Predicate (=Verb)-O/R/T.

But note, if the subclause is in the 1st place, the word order in the mainsentence is changed to: P (=verb)-S-O/R/T. The reason is that in Swedish the whole subclause is here seen as one and in the 1st place of the whole sentence (=Subclause + mainsentence). And the rule is the predicate (=verb) must always be in the 2nd place. So 1st place subclause, 2nd place predicate (=verb) and this is why the mainclause starts in this case with the predicate (=verb). Predicate (verb) and Subject go always together, also here. 

Mainsentence and Subclause + adverb

So, now, we add an adverb to the sentence.

Mainsentence, followed by subclause

Jag läser en bok idag, medan jag inte är i mitt rum. / I read a book today while I am in my room.

As we have learned already, in a regular mainclause the adverb would be after the predicate (=verb) like this SP(a)O(R)T: Jag läser inte en bok idag.

But note in the subclause that the adverb comes always after the subject like this S (=subjunction)-S(ubject)-a(dverb)- predicate (=verb)-O/R/T: medan jag inte är i mitt rum.

Subclause first, followed by mainsentence

Remember: the word order of the subclause never changes, so the adverb stays again after the subject.

The same as 4a): Subclause 1st place: Medan jag inte är i mitt rum, (mainsentence) läser (2nd place) jag en bok idag.

Tips hur att lära sig best ordfjöldet på huvudsatser, adverb och bisatser / Tipps how to learn the wordorder in mainsentences, with adverbs and with subclauses:

Om ni är förvirrad nu, startar ni best med enkla vanliga SPORT-huvudsatser. / If you are confused now, start best with simpel mainsentences with ordinary SPORT-wordorder.

Försätta att öva SPORT-huvudsatser med adverbet, då med förändrat ordfjöld. / Go on to study SPORT-mainsentences with placing an adverb in it.

Efter det försätta med SPORT-huvudsatser plus bisatser. / After det go further with SPORT-mainsentences plus subclause etc.

Den lättaste är att starta huvudsatsen med subjekten (SPORT) och på första platsen före bisatsen. / It is easiest to start the mainclause with the subject (SPORT) and to place the mainsentence on the first place before the subclause.    

      

Authors

Brainwashme, Ljus


Subject-verb-object-Sentense-structure-Swedish.jpg