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Icelandic grammar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Icelandic grammar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Icelandic grammar is a body of rules specifying how meanings are created in Icelandic. Icelandic is an inflected language with four cases: nominative, accusative, dative and genitive. Icelandic nouns can have one of three grammatical genders, masculine, feminine or neuter. Nouns, adjectives and pronouns are declined in four cases and two numbers, singular and plural.

Contents

[edit] Morphology

Many German speakers will find Icelandic morphology familiar. Almost every morphological category in one language is represented in the other. Nouns are declined for case, number and gender; adjectives for case, number, gender and comparison; and there are two declensions for adjectives, weak and strong. Icelandic possesses only the definite article, which can stand on its own, or be attached to its modified noun (as in other North Germanic languages). Verbs are conjugated for tense, mood, person, number and voice. There are three voices: active, passive and medial; but it may be debated whether the medial voice is a voice or simply an independent class of verbs. There are only two simple tenses, past and present, but to make up for that there are a number of auxiliary constructions, some of which may be regarded as tenses, others as aspects to varying degrees.

[edit] Nouns

See also: Strong noun and weak noun

Icelandic nouns are much like Old Norse, both in form and inflection. They decline in four cases (nominative, accusative, dative and genitive) and vary in gender (masculine, feminine or neuter) and number (singular and plural). There are two main declension paradigms for each gender: strong and weak nouns, which are furthermore divided in smaller paradigms for declension, according to many criteria (sound-shifts, consonant clusters, etc.) Following are four examples of strong declension. Glas means the drinking vessel glass, gler means the material glass. Those are etymologically the same words, but glas is a borrowing and gler is native. The (j) in the declension of gler means that the j is a later intrusion.

number case masculine feminine neuter neuter
singular nom. hattur borg glas gler
acc. hatt borg glas gler
dat. hatti borg glasi gleri
gen. hatts borgar glass glers
plural nom. hattar borgir glös gler
acc. hatta borgir glös gler
dat. höttum borgum glösum gler(j)um
gen. hatta borga glasa gler(j)a

The gender of a noun can often be surmised by looking at the ending of the word:

  • Masculine nouns—often end in -ur, -i, -ll or -nn.
  • Feminine nouns—often end in -a, -ing or -un.
  • Neuter nouns usually have no ending or have a final accented vowel.

[edit] Articles

Icelandic does not have an indefinite article (a/an in English), and the definite article (the) is usually joined onto the end of word in question. The independent article, i.e., not attached to the noun as a suffix, is mostly used in poetry and irregularly elsewhere (there are hardly any rules for the latter case; it is mainly a matter of taste). The table below shows the different suffix forms for the three genders (but be aware, that this list is not exhaustive, and there are numerous exceptions in every case):

No article Definite article
masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
sing. plu. sing. plu. sing. plu. sing. plu. sing. plu. sing. plu.
-ur -ar -0 -ir -0 -0 -urinn -arnir -0in -irnar -0ið -0in
-i -inn
-ll -a -ur -llinn -an -urnar
-nn -nninn

The example below shows three nouns, one for each respective gender, declined in the nominative:

  • masculine: hvalur—“(a) whale” becomes hvalurinn—“the whale”
  • feminine: klukka—“(a) clock” becomes klukkan—“the clock”
  • neuter: heimilisfang—“(an) address” becomes heimilisfang—“the address”

[edit] Pronouns

[edit] Personal

The personal pronouns in Icelandic are as follows:

case 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
singular nom. ég þú hann hún það
acc. mig þig hann hana það
dat. mér þér honum henni því
gen. mín þín hans hennar þess
plural nom. við þið þeir þær þau
acc. okkur ykkur þá þær þau
dat. okkur ykkur þeim
gen. okkar ykkar þeirra

Icelandic has separate masculine, feminine and neuter words for they; when talking about a group of mixed gender people or items, the neuter form is used.

Like English, the pronoun usually comes before the verb, as in the example below:

ég heiti MagnúsI am called Magnús

But, just as easily, the order of the sentence may be inverted. In this case, the pronoun moves to the end of the sentence:

Magnús heiti égMagnús I am called (or, literally Magnús called I am)

In English, changing of the word order like this would render a phrase nonsensical. This is mainly due to the fact that whilst being a Germanic language, English has lost most of its noun declension. See syntax for more information.

[edit] Reflexive

Icelandic possesses a reflexive pronoun, functioning in much the same way as German sich. The nominative case does not exist.

case pronoun
acc. sig
dat. sér
gen. sín

For example,

hann þvær sérhe washes himself,

as opposed to being bathed by another,

hún klæðir sigshe dresses herself,

as opposed to being dressed. The pronoun does not distinguish gender or number.

[edit] Possessive

The Icelandic possessive pronouns for the respective grammatical persons are as follows,

case 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
singular nom. minn mín mitt þinn þín þitt sinn sín sitt
acc. minn mína mitt þinn þína þitt sinn sína sitt
dat. mínum minni mínu þínum þinni þínu sínum sinni sínu
gen. míns minnar míns þíns þinnar þíns síns sinnar síns
plural nom. mínir mínar mín þínir þínar þín sínir sínar sín
acc. mína mínar mín þína þínar þín sína sínar sín
dat. mínum þínum sínum
gen. minna þinna sinna

where the three columns for each person represent masculine, feminine and neuter genders respectively. Minn means mine, þinn means yours and sinn means his.

[edit] Demonstrative

The Icelandic demonstrative pronouns are as follows,

case 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
singular nom. þessi þessi þetta það hinn hin hitt
acc. þennan þessa þetta þann þá það hinn hina hitt
dat. þessum þessari þessu þeim þeirri því hinum hinni hinu
gen. þessa þessarar þessa þess þeirrar þess hins hinnar hins
plural nom. þessir þessar þessi þeir þær þau hinir hinar hin
acc. þessa þessar þessi þá þær þau hina hinar hin
dat. þessum þeim hinum
gen. þessara þeirra hinna

where the three columns for each person represent masculine, feminine and neuter genders respectively. Þessi and roughly correspond to this/that and hinn means the other one of two.

[edit] Indefinite

There are around fifteen to twenty of these, depending on who is counting. For argument’s sake, paradigm for enginn (nobody) is given below. It is inflected thus:

nobody case Masculine Feminine Neuter
singular nom. enginn (engi) engin (engi) ekkert (ekki)
acc. engan (öng(v)an) enga (öng(v)a) ekkert (ekki)
dat. engum (öng(v)um) engri (öngri) engu (öng(v)u)
gen. einskis (einkis) engrar (öngrar) einskis (einkis)
plural nom. engir (öng(v)ir) engar (öng(v)ar) engin (engi)
acc. enga (öng(v)a) engar (öng(v)ar) engin (engi)
dat. engum (öng(v)um)
gen. engra (öngra)

This is probably the most colourful pronoun in Icelandic, but note that one can never go wrong using the first given forms. The forms in parentheses are either dialectal variations or archaic forms, used for poetic purposes. In time, however, one will encounter all of these forms. There is at least one more fossilized form, einugi, which is the dative of the singular neuter. It is preserved in the saying:

Fátt er svo illt, að einugi dugi, roughly translates as:
Few things are so bad that nothing helps.

[edit] Numerals

The words for one to four are declined for the respective cases and genders:

one masculine feminine neuter
nominative einn ein eitt
accusative einn eina eitt
dative einum einni einu
genitive eins einnar eins
two masculine feminine neuter
nominative tveir tvær tvö
accusative tvo tvær tvö
dative tveimur
genitive tveggja
three masculine feminine neuter
nominative þrír þrjár þrjú
accusative þrjá þrjár þrjú
dative þremur
genitive þriggja
four masculine feminine neuter
nominative fjórir fjórar fjögur
accusative fjóra fjórar fjögur
dative fjórum
genitive fjögurra

Other numbers are as follows and not declined except for those which are actually nouns:

five fimm nineteen nítján
six sex twenty tuttugu
seven sjö twenty-one tuttugu og einn
eight átta thirty þrjátíu
nine níu forty fjörutíu
ten tíu fifty fimmtíu
eleven ellefu sixty sextíu
twelve tólf seventy sjötíu
thirteen þrettán eighty áttatíu
fourteen fjórtán ninety níutíu
fifteen fimmtán (one) hundred (eitt) hundrað
sixteen sextán (one) thousand (eitt) þúsund
seventeen sautján (one) million (ein) milljón
eighteen átján zero núll

The word hundrað is actually a neuter noun, þúsund can be either feminine or neuter and the higher multiples of a thousand are either masculine or feminine, according to the ending (e.g. milljón is feminine, milljarður is masculine and so on). Núll is neuter.

[edit] Adjectives

Adjectives themselves must agree with the gender and number of the nouns that they describe. For example, the word íslenskur (Icelandic) agrees as follows:

Icelandic (strong) case Masculine Feminine Neuter
singular nom. íslenskur íslensk íslenskt
acc. íslenskan íslenska íslenskt
dat. íslenskum íslenskri íslensku
gen. íslensks íslenskrar íslensks
plural nom. íslenskir íslenskar íslensk
acc. íslenska íslenskar íslensk
dat. íslenskum
gen. íslenskra

In strong declension, for example:

Ég bý með íslenskri konuI live with an Icelandic woman

Both íslenskri and konu are dative singular. In this case it is the preposition með which governs the case. (Með can also take the accusative, but the distinction belongs to the syntax.) This is an example of strong declension of adjectives. If an adjective is modified by the article, or most pronouns, weak declension is used, for this word it would be íslenskur:

Icelandic (weak) case Masculine Feminine Neuter
singular nom. íslenski íslenska íslenska
acc., dat., gen. íslenska íslensku íslenska
plural All cases íslensku

An example of weak declension:

Ég sá veiku konunaI saw the sick woman

Veiku is the weak declension of veikur (sick) in the accusative singular. Konuna is also accusative singular, but with the definite article attached (-na), and the article forces the adjective to be weak. Here the verb governs the case.

Here, at least, there are far fewer forms to learn, three in all, although one has to learn, of course, how they are distributed.

[edit] Verbs

As with most inflected languages, the verbs in Icelandic determine (or governs) the case of the subsequent nouns, pronouns and adjectives of a sentence. For example:

  • Safna ('to collect or save') governs the dative case.
Ég er að safna peningum til þess að geta keypt jólagjöf handa mömmu.
I am saving money to be able to buy a Christmas gift for Mum. (Peningum is the dative plural form of peningur (coin))
  • Sakna ('to miss') governs the genitive case
Ég sakna þín
I miss you

In the infinitive, most Icelandic verbs end in -a. The exceptions are a few verbs ending in , for instance slá (‘hit’), flá (‘flay’) amongst various others, the auxiliaries munu and skulu, þvo (wash), originally þvá and the (frowned upon by purists) borrowing (from Danish) ske (happen). The two auxiliaries are important, since they turn up in various places to make up for the poverty of simple tenses. Þvo is, of course, very common, but ske can be avoided altogether. There are three main groups of weak verbs in Icelandic: -ar, -ir, and -ur, referring to the endings that these verbs take when conjugated in the third person singular present. The strong verbs and the irregular verbs (auxiliaries, ri-verbs and valda) are a separate matter. Take the infinitive tala (‘to talk’), for example:

Number Singular Plural
Person ég
I
þú
you (compare archaic thou)
hann/hún/það
he/she/it
við
we
þið
you (pl.)
þeir/þær/þau
they
tala
to talk
tala
talk
talar
talk
talar
talks
tölum
talk
talið
talk
tala
talk

And compare with the verb vera (‘to be’), a strong verb, and a highly irregular one at that, but useful for comparison:

vera
to be
er
am
ert
are
er
is
erum
are
eruð
are
eru
are

Læra (‘to learn’) is an -i verb:

læra
to learn
læri
learn
lærir
learn
lærir
learns
lærum
learn
lærið
learn
læra
learn

And finally velja (‘to choose’), which is an -ur verb:

velja
to choose
vel
choose
velur
choose
velur
chooses
veljum
choose
veljið
choose
velja
choose

Note how for each of the verb groups, the conjugations in the singular change, but in the plural, the endings are nearly always predictable (-um, -ið and -a, respectively). As English learners of many foreign languages find, conjugation can be difficult to understand because the majority of English verbs are regular and have only one change in ending (-s for third person singular). However, in the majority of cases in Icelandic, the conjugation patterns can be easily picked up and remain regular across most verbs. However, it should be noted that one can not determine how to conjugate a verb merely from seeing its infinitive, so it is a matter of learning which group each verb belongs to. Strong verbs fall into six groups augmented by reduplication verbs, each with its own peculiarities and exceptions—there are also auxiliary verbs and the so-called r-verbs—in addition to the only verb in Icelandic which has been called ‘totally irregular’: valda. There is more or less a classification system for all of the verbs, but the paradigms go into the dozens.

Some Icelandic infinitives end with the -ja suffix. These verbs can be conjugated like -ur verbs, that is to say that the suffix is lost in the first person singular. When conjugating -ja verbs, the single ‘j’ must also be removed, so syngja (‘to sing’) would become ég syng (‘I sing’) in the first person singular and not ég syngj. Note, however, that the j in itself is not a reliable indicator. Examples could be emja (‘squeal’), which belongs to one class (singular, first person, ég emja, past tense ég emjaði) versus telja (‘count’), belonging to another class, (ég tel, past tense ég taldi).

[edit] Tenses

Strictly speaking, there are only two simple tenses in Icelandic, simple present and simple past. All other tenses are formed using auxiliary constructions (some of these are regarded as tenses, others as aspects). For example, the present continuous is formed thus:

personal pronoun + vera + að + infinitive verb
ég er að læra
I am learning

However, it should be noted that this construction only usually applies to abstract concepts, and is not used for activities, e.g. to sit would not use this construction. Instead, the simple present should be used.

The collective tenses are:

  • conditional
  • future
  • past
    • continuous
    • perfect
    • subjunctive
  • present
    • continuous
    • perfect
    • subjunctive

[edit] Voice

Icelandic possesses the middle voice in addition to both the active and passive. Verbs in the middle voice always end in -st; this ending can be added to both the infinitive and conjugated verb forms. For the conjugated forms, second and third person endings (i.e. -(u)r, and -rð) must be removed, as must any dental consonants (ð, d and t). Compare the verb breyta (‘to change’) to its middle voice forms, for example:[1]

breyta
to change
breyti
change
breytir
change
breytir
changes
breytum
change
breytið
change
breyta
change
breytast
to change
breytist
change
breytist
change
breytist
changes
breytumst
change
breytist
change
breytast
change

The middle voice form of many verbs carries a slightly different meaning, and in some cases may carry a different meaning altogether. Some verbs survive only in their middle voice form, the other forms having been lost over time. The middle voice is generally used in the following situations to express:

  • Reflexivity—The middle voice form of a verb may be used in lieu of a reflexive pronoun, for example: Þór meiðir sigÞór meiðist (‘Þór hurts himself’)
  • Reciprocity—Here the middle voice is used to mean ‘each other’, for example: Þór talar við Stefán og Stefán talar við ÞórÞór og Stefán talast við (‘Þór and Stefán talk to each other’)
  • An alternative meaning—As previously mentioned, some middle voice verbs carry different meanings than their counterparts. Examples include koma (‘to come’ becoming komast (‘to get there’) and gera (‘to do’) becoming gerast (‘to happen’)
  • The passive—In certain situations, the middle voice may be used to express an idea for which we would use the passive in English. For example, the phrase bíllinn sést ekki translates as ‘the car cannot be seen’. Most often the middle voice is used in this context when there is no direct reference to any grammatical person.[2]

[edit] Mood

Like many other Indo-European languages, Icelandic has the subjunctive mood. It is often used to refer to situations with a degree of hypotheticity, but more specifically in the following situations:

  • In reported speech—It is used with the verb segja in the following sense: Jón segir að hún komi (‘Jón said that she’s coming’)
  • To express uncertainty—Used after the verbs vona (‘to hope’), óska (‘to wish’), halda (‘to believe’), búast við (‘to expect’), óttast, vera hræddur um (‘to fear’) and gruna (‘to suspect’): ég vona að henni batni (‘I hope that she gets better’)
  • Interrogative sentences—Specifically after the verb spyrja (‘to ask’): Jón spyr hvort þú ætlir að borða með okkur (‘Jón asks whether you’re going to eat with us’)
  • With conjunctions—The subjunctive is used after the conjunctions nema (‘unless’), þó að/þótt (‘although’), svo að (‘so that’), til þess að (‘in order to’)

[edit] Adverbs

Compared to other lexical categories, Icelandic adverbs are relatively simple, and are not declined, except in some cases for comparison, and can be constructed easily from adjectives, nouns and verbs. These derived adverbs often end in -lega (approximately equivalent to the -ly suffix in English):

nýrnewnýlegalately (lit. newly)

Note: The adverbs ending in -lega can be declined for comparison, which makes a rather large group on its own. Exempli gratia:

hættadangerhættulegahættulegarhættulegast, i.e. dangerouslymore dangerouslymost dangerously.

This is a regular way to form adverbs. Another way is to take the neutral nominative singular of an adjective and turn it into an adverb:

blíttgentleblíttgently, cf. hún sefur blíttshe sleeps gently

Another way is taking the stem of an adjective and add an a:

illurbadillabadly, cf. hann hagar sér illahe behaves badly (illur does never take the -lega surfix).

Like English, very many common adverbs do not stick to these patterns but are, so to speak, adverbs in their own right:

bráðumsoon
núnanow
oftoften
straxright away

The basic adverbs of direction include, among others:

austureast
norðurnorth
suðursouth
vesturwest
innin
innanfrom within
utanfrom outside
útout

Inn and út denote motion, going in and going out.

[edit] Other word classes

[edit] Prepositions

In Icelandic, prepositions determine the case of the following noun. Some examples are given below:

accusative dative genitive acc. or dat. depending on context
um—about að—at, with til—to á—on
gegnum—through af—off án—without eftir—after
umfram—in addition frá—from meðal—amongst fyrir—before
kringum—around hjá—with milli—between í—in
umhverfis—around úr—out of sökum—due to með—with
andspænis—opposite vegna—because undir—under
ásamt—along handan—beyond við—by
gagnvart—towards innan—inside yfir—over
gegn—through utan—outside
gegnt—vis-à-vis ofan—above
handa—for neðan—below
meðfram—along
móti—opposite, against
undan—from under

[edit] Syntax

Icelandic word order is SVO (subject-verb-object), generally speaking, with the subject and verb inverted in questions and when a sentence begins with an adverb. However, the inflectional system allows for considerable freedom in word order.

Despite this, there are certain rules of syntax which are relatively inflexible. For example, the main verb must always be the second lexical unit of the sentence (this is a feature known as V2 word order, as is common to many Germanic languages). Take the example below (subject in yellow, verb in blue, object in red):

Mannfjöldinn var 1.500The population was 1,500

Here the element var (the past tense third person singular form of the verb vera, ‘to be’, i.e. ‘was’) is the second lexical unit of the sentence. If we change the sentence, however:

Árið 2000 var mannfjöldinn 1.500In 2000, the population was 1,500 (lit. The year 2000 was the population 1,500)

Here, var is still the second lexical unit of the sentence, despite the fact that it is not the second word in the sentence. The prepositional phrase árið 2000 (highlighted in green) counts as one lexical unit, and so in order for the verb to be the second lexical unit it must come after 2000 and not after árið. The subject and object of the verb then follow. An exception to this rule arises when forming questions by inversion:

Stefán er svangurStefán is hungry

and when turned into a question:

Er Stefán svangur?Is Stefán hungry?

Here the subject and verb have been inverted to form a question, meaning the verb is the first lexical unit in the sentence as opposed to the second. This method of forming questions is used in many languages, including English.

[edit] Questions

As we have seen, questions can be easily formed by rearranging the order of the sentence from subject-verb-object to verb-subject-object. For example:

Þú talar íslensku.You speak Icelandic.

can be made into a question as follows:

Talar þú íslensku?Do you speak Icelandic? (lit. Speak you Icelandic?)

It should be noted that often a form of elision occurs when asking questions in the second person; the verb and þú have a tendency to merge together to ease pronunciation. This is reflected in writing, and so one would more often encounter talarðu as opposed to the expanded form talar þú. The actual change undergone here is the transformation of the voiceless dental fricative þ into the voiced dental fricative ð. This elision rule applies to many verbs, some having their own special forms (for example vera, ‘to be’, has the form ertu).[3]

The inversion rule still applies when interrogatives are involved, which are simply added to the front of the sentence. The interrogatives in Icelandic are:

  • hvað?what/how?
    • Hvað ert þú að gera?—What are you doing? (lit. What are you to do?)
  • hvaða?what?
    • Hvaða hundur?—What dog?
  • hver?who?
    • Hver ert þú?—Who are you?
  • hvernig?how?
    • Hvernig hefur þú það?—How are you? (lit. How have you it?)
  • hvar/hvert/hvaðan?where/whence?
    • Hvar ert þú?—Where are you?
    • Hvert ert þú að fara—Where are you going? (lit. Where are you to go?)
    • Hvaðan kemur þú?—Where do you come from? (lit. Whence come you?)
  • hvenær?when?
    • Hvenær kemur þú?—When do you come? (lit. When come you?)
  • hvers vegna/af hverju/hví?why?
    • Hvers vegna hann?—Why him?
    • Af hverju ekki?—Why not?
    • Hví?—Why?
  • hvort?whether/which?
    • Hvort hann komi, veit ég ekki.—I don’t know whether he’s coming or not. (lit. Whether he comes, know I not.)
    • Hvort vilt þú?—Which do you want? (lit. Which want you?, implying a choice between two alternatives.)

However, interrogative pronouns (hvað/hver) must decline with the verb that they modify, so the case of the pronoun will change depending on the verb. The meaning of a sentence does not change whether hvers vegna or af hverju is used; however they are used in a specific manner in Icelandic. Also of note, hví is rarely used.

[edit] Sound shifts

There are a number of sound shifts that occur in Icelandic, detailed below. The shifts occur very frequently across all word classes.

[edit] A-umlaut

This is the oldest umlaut of all, attested in every Germanic language except, perhaps, Gothic. It comes in two varieties:

ie (as for instance in niður vs. neðan).
uo. Well known examples include fugl (cf. English fowl) or stofa (cf. German Stube).

This umlaut is no longer productive.

[edit] U-umlaut

The U-umlaut occurs when a stem vowel a changes to ö because of a u in the next syllable. This affects a only, and not á or au. Some examples:

talatalk(við) tölum(we) talk
farago(við) förum(we) go

If there is an intermediate syllable between the first a and the u, then the U-shift does not take place.

U-umlaut is not to be confused with breaking although they appear similar.

Note that if there are two a's preceding the u, the first a becomes an ö and the second becomes a u. An example:

fagnaðurjoyfögnuðumjoys (dative, plural).

Exceptions to this include several borrowings, for instance bananibananabanönum (dative plural) and ArabiArabAröbum (also dative plural).

Historically, there were four more additional forms of the U-umlaut; these are no longer productive or have been reversed.

[edit] I-umlaut

The I-umlaut is slightly more complex, and consists of the following vowel changes:

ae
áæ
ei
oe
óæ
uy (It sometimes appears as if oy, but this is never the case. An example: Sonur (singular) ⇒ synir (plural) might give the impression of an I-umlaut, but the original vowel in sonur was u changed to o by the A-umlaut.)
ú, and ý
auey

Less known, non-productive and reversed changes include:

oø
ǫø

[edit] Other umlauts

Historically, there were many more umlauts in Icelandic, including:

  • IR-umlaut
  • J-umlaut
  • R-umlaut
  • G-k-umlaut
  • W-umlaut

These are much more limited in scope, and operate more or less in the same way as the above mentioned umlauts (i.e. have more or less the same effect). Having mentioned reversed or non-productive umlauts above, it remains to be stressed that the I- and U-umlauts are very much alive, both as a fixture of the declension system as well as being useful tools for composing neologisms. This applies to breaking as well.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Neijmann, Daisy (2001). Colloquial Icelandic. Routledge, 201-202. ISBN 0415207061. 
  2. ^ Neijmann, Daisy (2001). Colloquial Icelandic. Routledge, 228. ISBN 0415207061. 
  3. ^ Neijmann, Daisy (2001). Colloquial Icelandic. Routledge, 21. ISBN 0415207061. 

[edit] External links


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