スウェーデン語の文法
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A1 (30)
Subject pronouns (jag, du, han/hon/hen/den/det, vi, ni, de) including the gender-neutral 'hen'. Foundation for verb conjugation.
Swedish nouns are either 'en-words' (common gender) or 'ett-words' (neuter gender). About 75% are en-words. Gender affects articles and adjective agreement.
Swedish adds the definite article as a suffix: -en/-n for en-words, -et/-t for ett-words. Plural definite uses -na/-en/-a.
Five main plural patterns: -or (en flicka→flickor), -ar (en bil→bilar), -er (en student→studenter), -n (ett äpple→äpplen), zero (ett barn→barn).
The irregular verb 'vara' (to be): är (present), var (past). Same form for all persons. Essential for identity, location, and descriptions.
The verb 'ha' (to have): har (present), hade (past). Used for possession and as auxiliary verb in perfect tenses.
Four verb groups in present tense: Group 1 (-ar: talar), Group 2a (-er: läser), Group 2b (-er: köper), Group 3 (-r: bor). Same form for all persons.
Adjectives agree with noun gender and number: base form with en-words, -t with ett-words, -a in plural and with definite nouns.
Swedish uses V2 word order: the verb is always second in statements. Subject-verb inversion occurs when another element starts the sentence.
Negation with 'inte' (not) placed after the verb in main clauses, before the verb in subordinate clauses.
Yes/no questions use verb-first order. Question words: vad (what), vem (who), var (where), när (when), hur (how), varför (why).
Possessives agree with the possessed noun: min/mitt/mina, din/ditt/dina, hans/hennes/dess, vår/vårt/våra, er/ert/era, deras.
Common prepositions: i (in), på (on/at), till (to), från (from), med (with), för (for), av (of/by), om (about/around).
Cardinal numbers 0-100, ordinal numbers, telling time (klockan), days of the week, months, and seasons.
Modal verbs: kan (can), vill (want), ska (shall/will), måste (must), får (may/get to), behöver (need). Followed by infinitive without 'att'.
Demonstratives: den/det/de här (this/these), den/det/de där (that/those). Agree in gender and number with the noun.
The infinitive marker 'att' before verbs, similar to English 'to'. Omitted after modal verbs. Used in constructions like 'försöker att', 'börjar att'.
Existential construction 'det finns' (there is/are). 'Det är' for temporary states, 'det finns' for general existence.
Coordinating conjunctions: och (and), men (but), eller (or), för (because), så (so). Do not trigger inversion.
Four verb groups: Group 1 (-ade/-at), Group 2a (-de/-t), Group 2b (-te/-t), Group 3 (-dde/-tt). Regular patterns for past and supine.
Using 'det' as formal subject in weather, time, and impersonal constructions: 'det regnar', 'det är kallt', 'det tar tid'.
Strong verbs with vowel changes: gå/gick/gått, se/såg/sett, komma/kom/kommit, göra/gjorde/gjort, vara/var/varit.
When an adjective modifies a definite noun, Swedish uses both a free article (den/det/de) and the suffixed article: 'den stora bilen'.
Expressing preferences: 'tycka om' (to like), 'älska' (to love), 'föredra' (to prefer), 'gilla' (to like, colloquial).
Place adverbs distinguishing location from direction: här/hit, där/dit, hemma/hem, ute/ut, inne/in, uppe/upp, nere/ner.
Essential greetings and polite expressions: hej (hi), god morgon (good morning), hej då (goodbye), tack (thanks), ursäkta (excuse me).
Ordinal numbers: första, andra/andre, tredje, fjärde... Used for dates, floors, sequences. 'Andra/andre' varies by gender.
Expressing needs with 'behöva' (need), 'vilja ha' (want to have), 'ha lust att' (feel like). Common everyday constructions.
Common verbs ending in -s with reciprocal or passive-like meaning: träffas (meet each other), tyckas (seem), finnas (exist), lyckas (succeed).
Choosing between 'på' and 'i' for locations: i staden (in the city), på landet (in the country), i skolan (at school), på jobbet (at work).
A2 (11)
Past tense forms: Group 1 (-ade), Group 2a (-de), Group 2b (-te), Group 3 (-dde), irregular verbs. Indicates completed past actions.
Formed with 'har' + supine. Supine endings: -at (Group 1), -t (Group 2), -tt (Group 3), irregular. Used for past with present relevance.
Verbs used with reflexive pronouns (sig, mig, dig): tvätta sig (wash oneself), känna sig (feel), sätta sig (sit down).
Object forms: mig, dig, honom/henne/den/det, oss, er, dem. Used as direct and indirect objects.
Subordinate clauses with att (that), om (if/whether), när (when), medan (while), eftersom (because). Note: BIFF rule - adverb before verb.
Verbs with separable particles that change meaning: gå ut (go out), komma tillbaka (come back), stänga av (turn off). Particle is stressed.
Comparative (-are) and superlative (-ast) forms. Irregular forms: bra→bättre→bäst, dålig→sämre→sämst. 'Mer/mest' for long adjectives.
Possession marked by adding -s to the owner (no apostrophe): Annas bok, Sveriges huvudstad, pojkens hund.
Time connectors: igår (yesterday), imorgon (tomorrow), om en stund (in a moment), för...sedan (ago), i...tid (for...time).
Expressing quantity: lite (a little), mycket/många (much/many), tillräckligt (enough), för (too). 'Mycket' with uncountable, 'många' with countable.
Past tense of modals: kunde (could), ville (would), skulle (should), var tvungen att (had to). Used for past ability, intention, obligation.
B1 (12)
Future expressed with 'ska' + infinitive (intention/plan), 'kommer att' + infinitive (prediction), or present tense with time adverb.
Formed with 'hade' + supine. Used for actions completed before another past action.
Formed with 'skulle' + infinitive. Used for hypothetical situations, polite requests, and reported future in past.
Command form using verb stem. Group 1: -a (tala!), Groups 2-4: stem only (läs!, skriv!). Polite forms with 'kan/skulle du'.
Relative pronouns: som (who/which/that - most common), vars (whose), vilken/vilket/vilka (which - formal). 'Som' can be omitted when it's the object.
Passive formed by adding -s to verb: byggas (be built), säljas (be sold). Common in formal writing and signs.
Verbs with passive form but active meaning: hoppas (hope), lyckas (succeed), minnas (remember), andas (breathe), fattas (be missing).
Adverbs from adjectives with -t: snabb→snabbt. Placement: after verb in main clause, before verb in subordinate clause (BIFF).
Impersonal expressions with 'man' (one/you), 'det' + passive, and fixed phrases. 'Man' is the generic pronoun for rules and norms.
Time conjunctions: när (when), medan (while), innan/före (before), efter att (after), sedan (since), tills (until).
Indirect questions with 'om' (yes/no) or question words. Use subordinate clause word order (BIFF rule).
Subordinating conjunctions: trots att (although), om inte (unless), antingen...eller (either...or), varken...eller (neither...nor).
B2 (11)
Distinguishing nominal clauses (att...), adverbial clauses (eftersom/medan/trots att...), and relative clauses. Different word order implications.
Using den/det/de as anaphoric pronouns referring to previously mentioned nouns. 'Det' as dummy subject and in cleft sentences.
Passive with 'bli' + past participle emphasizes the action/change. Contrasts with s-passive (state/process) and vara-passive (result).
Rare in modern Swedish, mainly in fixed expressions: leve kungen (long live the king), vare sig (whether), må så vara (so be it).
Reported speech with tense shift and pronoun changes. 'Att' often omitted after verbs of saying/thinking.
Real conditions (om + present), unreal present (om + preteritum, skulle), unreal past (om + hade + supine, skulle ha).
Adverbs modifying entire sentences: kanske (maybe), tyvärr (unfortunately), faktiskt (actually). Position affects meaning and emphasis.
Swedish readily forms compound words: järnvägsstation (railway station). The last element determines gender. Linking -s- is common.
Passive with 'vara' + past participle describes a state/result. Contrasts with bli-passive (action) and s-passive (process).
Complex infinitive phrases: 'för att' (in order to), 'utan att' (without), 'istället för att' (instead of). Purpose and manner constructions.
Expressing that someone causes something: 'få någon att' (get someone to), 'låta någon' (let someone), 'be någon att' (ask someone to).
C1 (7)
Formed with -ande/-ende: talande (speaking), läsande (reading). Used as adjectives, adverbs, or in progressive constructions.
Used as adjective, agrees in gender/number: en skriven bok, ett skrivet brev, skrivna böcker. Different from supine (har skrivit).
Advanced fronting for emphasis and topic-comment structure. Elements other than subject can be topicalized in V2 structure.
Features of formal Swedish: passive voice preference, nominal style, complex compounds, vilken/vilket instead of som.
Creating nouns from verbs/adjectives: -ning (förbättring), -else (beslutelse→not used, but: förelse), -het (skönhet). Common in formal writing.
Complex prepositional phrases: i förhållande till (in relation to), trots (despite), i samband med (in connection with), med tanke på (with a view to).
Advanced tense relationships: tense shifts in reported speech, narrative perspective changes, and temporal anchoring in complex sentences.
C2 (7)
Informal spoken features: reductions (ja→jag, de→dom, är→e), discourse particles (ju, väl, nog, visst), tag questions.
Swedish idioms and fixed expressions: slå två flugor i en smäll, lägga locket på, ha en räv bakom örat.
Rhetorical devices: litotes (inte oväntad), understatement, chiasmus, ironic constructions, and marked syntax for effect.
Legal and administrative Swedish: archaic vocabulary, nominal constructions, complex clause nesting, formal passive constructions.
Discourse particles conveying speaker attitude: ju (shared knowledge), väl (assumption), visst (certainly/apparently), nog (probably), minsann (indeed).
Historical and literary Swedish: archaic pronouns (eder, I = you formal/plural), older verb forms, and literary constructions.
Awareness of Swedish dialect variation: Skånska, Göteborgska, Norrländska, Finlandssvenska. Pronunciation and vocabulary differences.
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