A1

Question Formation

Frågor

Question Formation in Swedish

Overview

Asking questions in Swedish is simpler than in English in one important way: you never need auxiliary verbs like "do," "does," or "did." Swedish forms questions either by putting the verb first (for yes/no questions) or by starting with a question word (for information questions). Both patterns follow naturally from the V2 word order rule.

At the A1 level, being able to ask questions is just as important as making statements. Questions allow you to participate in conversations, ask for directions, order food, and learn more about the people around you. Swedish question words are mostly short, common words that you will memorize quickly.

The lack of auxiliary verbs in Swedish questions is one of the great simplifications compared to English. Where English requires "Do you speak Swedish?", Swedish simply inverts subject and verb: Talar du svenska?

How It Works

Yes/No Questions (Verb First)

To form a yes/no question, move the verb to the first position — before the subject:

Statement Question English
Du talar svenska. Talar du svenska? Do you speak Swedish?
Hon kommer idag. Kommer hon idag? Is she coming today?
Det är dyrt. Är det dyrt? Is it expensive?
Ni har barn. Har ni barn? Do you have children?
Han kan simma. Kan han simma? Can he swim?

Question Words (W-Questions)

Information questions start with a question word, followed by the verb in second position:

Question word Meaning Example English
Vad What Vad heter du? What is your name?
Vem Who Vem är det? Who is that?
Var Where Var bor du? Where do you live?
Varifrån Where from Varifrån kommer du? Where do you come from?
Vart Where (to) Vart ska du? Where are you going?
När When När börjar filmen? When does the movie start?
Hur How Hur mår du? How are you?
Varför Why Varför gråter barnet? Why is the child crying?
Vilken/Vilket/Vilka Which Vilken bus ska jag ta? Which bus should I take?
Hur mycket How much Hur mycket kostar det? How much does it cost?
Hur många How many Hur många barn har du? How many children do you have?

Vilken/Vilket/Vilka (Which)

This question word agrees with the noun's gender and number:

Gender/Number Form Example English
En-word vilken Vilken bok vill du ha? Which book do you want?
Ett-word vilket Vilket hus är ditt? Which house is yours?
Plural vilka Vilka filmer gillar du? Which movies do you like?

Question Word as Subject

When the question word is the subject of the sentence, there is no inversion — the word order is the same as a statement:

Question English Note
Vem bor här? Who lives here? Vem = subject, no inversion
Vad hände? What happened? Vad = subject
Vilken buss går till centrum? Which bus goes downtown? Vilken buss = subject

Compare with when the question word is not the subject:

Question English Note
Vem träffade du? Who did you meet? Vem = object, du = subject (inverted)

Examples in Context

Swedish English Note
Talar du svenska? Do you speak Swedish? Yes/no, verb first
Var bor du? Where do you live? Question word + V2
Vad heter du? What's your name? Literally "what are you called"
Hur mår du? How are you? Common greeting
Kan jag få notan? Can I get the bill? Yes/no with modal
Hur mycket kostar det? How much does it cost? Shopping essential
Vilken tid börjar mötet? What time does the meeting start? Vilken with en-word
Varför är du ledsen? Why are you sad? Reason question
Finns det en bank här? Is there a bank here? Existential question
När kommer tåget? When does the train arrive? Time question
Vem är hon? Who is she? Identity question
Har du tid? Do you have time? Simple yes/no

Common Mistakes

Adding "do/does" auxiliary

  • Wrong: Gör du talar svenska?
  • Right: Talar du svenska?
  • Why: Swedish does not use "do" as a question auxiliary. Simply invert the subject and verb.

Forgetting inversion in yes/no questions

  • Wrong: Du talar svenska? (with question intonation only)
  • Right: Talar du svenska?
  • Why: While rising intonation can signal a question in casual speech, the standard and correct way is verb-first order. Relying only on intonation sounds incomplete.

Using var when you mean vart

  • Wrong: Var ska du? (asking "where are you going?")
  • Right: Vart ska du?
  • Why: Var = where (location/static), vart = where to (direction/motion). This distinction is important in Swedish, though it is fading in casual speech.

Wrong form of vilken

  • Wrong: Vilken hus bor du i?
  • Right: Vilket hus bor du i?
  • Why: Since hus is an ett-word, the correct form is vilket, not vilken.

Usage Notes

In everyday Swedish, question intonation (rising pitch at the end) is used alongside the grammatical inversion, but the inversion is still expected. In very casual texting or speech, Swedes sometimes form questions with statement word order and just a question mark or rising intonation, but this is informal.

The question Hur mår du? (How are you?) is a genuine question in Swedish — people expect a real answer, unlike the ritualistic "How are you?" in English. A common response is Bra, tack! (Good, thanks!) or Det är bra (It's good).

Or-inte questions are common in Swedish: Kommer du eller inte? (Are you coming or not?). Tag questions like English "isn't it?" are less structured in Swedish — Swedes typically use eller hur? (right?) or va? (right?/huh?) at the end.

Practice Tips

  • Memorize the question words as a set. Learn vad, vem, var, när, hur, varför as a group. These six words will cover the vast majority of questions you need to ask.

  • Practice converting statements to questions. Take any statement and turn it into both a yes/no question and an information question: Du bor i Stockholm → Bor du i Stockholm? Var bor du?

  • Role-play common scenarios. Practice questions for shopping (Hur mycket kostar det?), meeting people (Vad heter du? Varifrån kommer du?), and daily life (Var är toaletten? När öppnar butiken?).

Related Concepts

  • Prerequisite: Basic Word Order — question formation builds on understanding V2 word order and inversion

Prerequisite

Basic Word OrderA1

More A1 concepts

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