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Place Adverbs (Här/Där/Hem) in Swedish

Platsadverb

Overview

Swedish makes a clear distinction between where you are (location) and where you are going (direction) using different forms of place adverbs. English often uses the same word for both --- "home" can mean "at home" or "going home" --- but Swedish has separate words for each. This is a fundamental feature that you will use from your very first day of learning Swedish at the CEFR A1 level.

Getting these pairs right is essential for sounding natural. Swedes notice immediately when a learner mixes up hemma (at home) and hem (homeward), and correcting this early will save you from a deeply ingrained habit.

How It Works

Location vs. Direction Pairs

Location (where?) Direction (where to?) English
här (here) hit (to here) here
där (there) dit (to there) there
hemma (at home) hem (home, homeward) home
ute (outside) ut (out) out/outside
inne (inside) in (in) in/inside
uppe (up there) upp (upward) up
nere (down there) ner/ned (downward) down
borta (away, gone) bort (away, direction) away
framme (at the destination) fram (forward) forward/there

The Rule

  • Use location forms with verbs of being/staying: vara, stå, sitta, ligga, bo.
  • Use direction forms with verbs of movement: gå, komma, åka, springa, flytta.
Verb Type Adverb Type Example
vara (be) location Jag är hemma. (I am at home.)
gå (go) direction Jag går hem. (I go home.)
sitta (sit) location Hon sitter ute. (She sits outside.)
springa (run) direction Hon springer ut. (She runs out.)

With Prepositions

Some location adverbs combine with prepositions for more specific meanings:

Swedish English
härifrån from here
därifrån from there
hit och dit here and there
där uppe up there
här nere down here

Examples in Context

Swedish English Note
Jag är hemma. I am at home. Location (being)
Jag går hem. I go home. Direction (moving)
Hon är ute. She is outside. Location
Kom in! Come in! Direction
Barnen leker där. The children play there. Location
Spring dit! Run there! Direction
Vi sitter inne idag. We're staying inside today. Location
Han gick ut för en stund. He went out for a moment. Direction
Är du där uppe? Are you up there? Location combined
Jag vill åka hem nu. I want to go home now. Direction with modal
De bor här. They live here. Location
Kom hit! Come here! Direction

Common Mistakes

Using direction form with a being verb

  • Wrong: Jag är hem.
  • Right: Jag är hemma.
  • Why: With vara (to be), you describe a location, so you need the location form hemma.

Using location form with a movement verb

  • Wrong: Jag går hemma.
  • Right: Jag går hem.
  • Why: With (to go), you describe direction/movement, so you need the direction form hem.

Confusing här/hit and där/dit

  • Wrong: Kom här!
  • Right: Kom hit!
  • Why: Komma is a movement verb, so you need the direction form hit (to here), not the location form här (at here).

Forgetting the pairs exist

  • Wrong: Katten är ut. (meaning the cat is outside)
  • Right: Katten är ute.
  • Why: Being outside is a location, requiring ute. Ut would mean moving outward.

Usage Notes

This location/direction distinction is consistent across all registers of Swedish, from children's speech to formal writing. There is no casual shortcut that merges the pairs. In fact, this is one of the features that Swedish shares with other Scandinavian languages but that English has largely lost.

The pair borta/bort has a slightly broader meaning. Borta can mean "away" or "gone" (not present), while bort indicates movement away from the speaker.

Practice Tips

  • Pair each adverb with a verb that matches: always say vara hemma and gå hem together until the pattern becomes automatic. Never practice the adverb in isolation.
  • When you describe your daily routine, deliberately use both forms: Jag går ut på morgonen. Jag är ute hela dagen. Jag går hem på kvällen. Jag är hemma på natten.
  • Test yourself by asking two questions about any place: Var är du? (location) and Vart går du? (direction). The answer to the first uses a location adverb; the answer to the second uses a direction adverb.

Related Concepts

This concept has no listed prerequisites or children, but it connects naturally to basic prepositions and word order in Swedish.

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