C1

Nominalization in Norwegian

Nominalisering

Overview

Nominalization is the process of creating nouns from verbs and adjectives. In Norwegian, this is accomplished through a set of productive suffixes — primarily "-ning," "-else," "-het," and "-skap" — that transform action words and descriptive words into abstract nouns. "Forbedre" (to improve) becomes "forbedring" (improvement), "bestemme" (to decide) becomes "beslutning" (decision), and "skjønn" (beautiful) becomes "skjønnhet" (beauty).

This is a C1-level topic because nominalization is a hallmark of formal and academic Norwegian. While everyday speech favors verbal constructions ("Vi utvikler systemet" — We are developing the system), formal writing prefers nominal ones ("Utviklingen av systemet" — The development of the system). Mastering nominalization is essential for reading and producing academic papers, government documents, business reports, and quality journalism in Norwegian.

Nominalization also creates denser, more abstract prose. A single nominalized noun phrase can compress an entire clause into a compact form. This density is valued in formal registers but can reduce clarity if overused — a tension that Norway's "klarspråk" (plain language) movement actively addresses.

How It Works

Main Suffixes

Suffix Added To Meaning Examples
-ning Verb stems Action/result forbedring (improvement), utvikling (development)
-else Verb stems Action/result/state beslutning (decision), oppdagelse (discovery)
-het Adjective stems Quality/state skjønnhet (beauty), mulighet (possibility)
-skap Noun/adj stems State/quality/group vennskap (friendship), samfunn (society)
-dom Noun/adj stems State/condition sykdom (illness), rikdom (wealth)

Verb-to-Noun with "-ning"

"-Ning" is the most productive nominalization suffix:

Verb Nominalization English
forbedre forbedring improvement
utvikle utvikling development
bearbeide bearbeiding processing
forklare forklaring explanation
beskrive beskrivelse/beskriving description
overraske overraskelse surprise
planlegge planlegging planning
undervise undervisning teaching

Verb-to-Noun with "-else"

"-Else" is also very common but less predictable. Some verbs can take either "-ning" or "-else":

Verb Nominalization English
bestemme beslutning/bestemmelse decision/determination
oppdage oppdagelse discovery
begynne begynnelse beginning
forstå forståelse understanding
overraske overraskelse surprise
handle handling action

Adjective-to-Noun with "-het"

"-Het" creates abstract nouns from adjectives:

Adjective Nominalization English
skjønn skjønnhet beauty
mulig mulighet possibility
vanskelig vanskelighet difficulty
sikker sikkerhet safety/certainty
viktig viktighet importance
enkel enkelhet simplicity
fri frihet freedom

Gender of Nominalized Nouns

Almost all nominalizations are masculine/feminine (en-words):

Suffix Gender Example
-ning en/ei en forbedring
-else en/ei en beslutning
-het en/ei en mulighet
-skap et (exception!) et vennskap
-dom en en sykdom

Note: "-skap" nouns are typically neuter (et-words), which is an exception to the pattern.

Verbal vs. Nominal Style

Verbal (Informal/Spoken) Nominal (Formal/Written) English
Vi utvikler systemet. Utviklingen av systemet pågår. The development of the system is underway.
De besluttet å... Beslutningen om å... The decision to...
Vi skal forbedre kvaliteten. Forbedring av kvaliteten er prioritert. Improvement of quality is prioritized.
Fordi vi forsto det... På grunn av vår forståelse... Due to our understanding...

Nominalization with Prepositions

Nominalized nouns typically connect to their complements using prepositions:

Preposition Pattern Example
av N + av + object utviklingen av systemet
om N + om + topic beslutningen om å slutte
til N + til + purpose tillatelse til å reise
for N + for + beneficiary anerkjennelse for innsatsen

Examples in Context

Norwegian English Note
Forbedringen av systemet tar tid. The improvement of the system takes time. -ning from forbedre
Beslutningen ble tatt. The decision was made. -ning from bestemme
Utviklingen går raskt. The development is fast. -ning from utvikle
Skjønnheten i naturen. The beauty in nature. -het from skjønn
Muligheten for endring er stor. The possibility for change is great. -het from mulig
Forståelsen av problemet øker. The understanding of the problem increases. -else from forstå
Oppdagelsen forandret alt. The discovery changed everything. -else from oppdage
Sikkerheten er viktig. Safety is important. -het from sikker
Behandlingen av søknaden pågår. The processing of the application is underway. -ning from behandle
Enkelheten i designet er bevisst. The simplicity of the design is intentional. -het from enkel
Frihetens pris er høy. The price of freedom is high. -het from fri, genitive
Undervsiningen starter kl. 9. Teaching begins at 9. -ning from undervise

Common Mistakes

Wrong: forbedrelsen Right: forbedringen Why: The correct nominalization of "forbedre" uses "-ning," not "-else." While both suffixes nominalize verbs, they are not interchangeable — each verb has a conventional suffix.

Wrong: en vennskap Right: et vennskap Why: Nouns ending in "-skap" are neuter (et-words), unlike most other nominalizations which are masculine/feminine.

Wrong: Utviklingen for systemet pågår. Right: Utviklingen av systemet pågår. Why: The preposition "av" (of) is used to connect a nominalization to its object. Using "for" changes the meaning.

Wrong: Overusing nominalization in all contexts. Right: Use nominalization in formal registers; prefer verbal constructions in casual writing and speech. Why: Excessive nominalization makes text dense and hard to read. Norway's klarspråk guidelines specifically advise against unnecessary nominalization in public documents.

Wrong: mulighetlig (adding extra suffix) Right: mulighet Why: Do not stack nominalization suffixes. "Mulig" takes "-het" to become "mulighet" — adding further suffixes creates non-words.

Usage Notes

Nominalization is overwhelmingly a feature of formal written Norwegian. Academic papers, legal documents, government communications, and business reports all rely heavily on nominalized forms. In contrast, spoken Norwegian and informal writing strongly prefer verbal constructions.

Norway's Språkrådet (Language Council) and the klarspråk movement encourage writers to "verbalize" nominalized text — that is, to convert nouns back to verbs for clarity. For example, "Gjennomføring av evaluering av tiltaket" (Implementation of evaluation of the measure) is clearer as "Vi evaluerer tiltaket" (We are evaluating the measure). C1 learners should be able to both produce and simplify nominalized prose.

There is no significant difference between Bokmål and Nynorsk in nominalization patterns, though specific vocabulary items may differ.

Practice Tips

  1. Read a formal Norwegian document and identify all nominalizations. Government reports from regjeringen.no are excellent sources. For each nominalization, identify the root verb or adjective and consider how the sentence would read in verbal style.

  2. Practice converting between nominal and verbal styles. Take a formal paragraph and rewrite it in plain language, then reverse the exercise. This builds bidirectional fluency between registers.

  3. Create suffix charts for new verbs you learn. Whenever you learn a new verb, check whether it nominalizes with "-ning," "-else," or another suffix. Building this awareness incrementally is more effective than memorizing lists.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Formal Written Style in NorwegianC1

More C1 concepts

Want to practice Nominalization in Norwegian and more Norwegian grammar? Create a free account to study with spaced repetition.

Get Started Free