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🇳🇴B1

B1 Norwegian GrammarTwo-Way Prepositions

Master Norwegian prepositions that can express both location and direction. Learn when to use 'i' vs 'til', 'på' for surfaces, and how verbs determine whether prepositions express static location or movement.

1Location vs Direction Prepositions

Norwegian uses different prepositions for location (where?) and direction (where to?). 'I' indicates inside location, 'til' indicates direction to. 'På' can mean both on (location) and to (with certain places). The verb type helps determine meaning.

Location vs Direction

LocationDirectionEnglish
i husetinn i husetin/into the house
på bordetpå bordeton/onto the table
i Oslotil Osloin/to Oslo
på skolentil skolenat/to school

Examples

Jeg er i Oslo.

I am in Oslo.

i = location

Jeg reiser til Oslo.

I travel to Oslo.

til = direction

Boka ligger på bordet.

The book is on the table.

på = on (location)

Legg boka på bordet.

Put the book on the table.

på with motion verb

2The Preposition 'I' (In/Inside)

'I' indicates location inside something. For movement into, use 'inn i' (into). 'I' is used for cities, countries, rooms, and containers. With motion verbs, 'i' alone can imply direction in some contexts.

Uses of 'I'

ContextLocationDirection
Roomi stuainn i stua
Cityi byeninn til byen
Countryi Norgetil Norge
Containeri boksenned i boksen

Examples

Hun sitter i stua.

She is sitting in the living room.

location inside

Hun går inn i stua.

She walks into the living room.

inn i = into

Vi bor i en leilighet.

We live in an apartment.

permanent location

Vi flytter inn i en leilighet.

We are moving into an apartment.

direction of movement

3The Preposition 'På' (On/At)

'På' indicates location on a surface or at a place. It works for both location and direction with surfaces. For institutions and activities, 'på' often means 'at' (på jobb, på skolen). Motion verbs determine if it means placing onto.

Uses of 'På'

ContextLocationDirection
Surfacepå gulvetned på gulvet
Institutionpå kontoretpå kontoret
Activitypå jobbpå jobb
Islandpå Fyntil Fyn

Examples

Katten sitter på stolen.

The cat is sitting on the chair.

på for surface

Katten hopper opp på stolen.

The cat jumps onto the chair.

opp på = onto

Han er på kontoret.

He is at the office.

på for workplace

Han går på kontoret.

He goes to the office.

direction with gå

4Verbs That Indicate Location or Motion

Norwegian has pairs of verbs: location verbs (være, sitte, ligge, stå) and motion verbs (gå, komme, legge, sette). The verb type determines if the preposition expresses where or where to. Motion verbs imply directional meaning.

Location vs Motion Verbs

Location (State)Motion (Action)Meaning
liggeleggelie / lay
sittesettesit / set
ståstillestand / place
værebe / go

Examples

Boka ligger på bordet.

The book is lying on the table.

ligge = location

Jeg legger boka på bordet.

I lay the book on the table.

legge = motion

Han står i køkkenet.

He is standing in the kitchen.

stå = location

Han stiller seg i køkkenet.

He positions himself in the kitchen.

stille = motion