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A1 Swedish GrammarArticles (Definite & Indefinite)

Learn how Swedish articles work - including the unique feature where definite articles are attached as suffixes to nouns. Understand the two-gender system (en/ett) and how it affects all articles and adjectives.

1The Two-Gender System: En and Ett

Swedish has two grammatical genders: common gender (using 'en') and neuter gender (using 'ett'). Unlike German with three genders, Swedish simplifies things with just two. About 75% of nouns are en-words, making ett-words the minority. Unfortunately, there's no foolproof rule to determine gender - you need to memorize it with each noun. However, there are some patterns: most living things and many everyday objects are en-words, while many abstract concepts and borrowed words tend to be ett-words.

Indefinite Articles

GenderArticleExampleEnglish
Common (en)enen boka book
Common (en)enen stola chair
Neuter (ett)ettett husa house
Neuter (ett)ettett barna child

Examples

Jag har en hund.

I have a dog.

hund is an en-word

Det finns ett äpple.

There is an apple.

äpple is an ett-word

Hon köper en bil.

She buys a car.

bil is an en-word

Vi bor i ett litet hus.

We live in a small house.

hus is an ett-word

2Definite Articles: The Suffix System

Here's what makes Swedish unique: instead of placing 'the' before the noun like in English, Swedish attaches the definite article to the END of the noun as a suffix. En-words add -en or -n, and ett-words add -et or -t. The suffix depends on whether the noun ends in a consonant or a vowel. This takes practice but becomes natural with exposure.

Definite Suffixes

GenderEndingSuffixExample
En-wordconsonant-enbok → boken (the book)
En-wordvowel-nskola → skolan (the school)
Ett-wordconsonant-ethus → huset (the house)
Ett-wordvowel-täpple → äpplet (the apple)

Examples

Boken är intressant.

The book is interesting.

en bok → boken

Huset är stort.

The house is big.

ett hus → huset

Flickan springer.

The girl runs.

en flicka → flickan

Barnet sover.

The child sleeps.

ett barn → barnet

3Common En-Words to Know

Most everyday Swedish nouns are en-words. Learning these common words with their gender will help you build correct sentences. Try to always learn the article together with the noun. People, animals, and many tangible objects tend to be en-words. This includes most profession names, family members, and body parts.

Common En-Words

SwedishDefiniteEnglish
en manmannena/the man
en kvinnakvinnana/the woman
en dagdagena/the day
en tidtidena/the time
en vägvägena/the road/way
en frågafrågana/the question

Examples

Mannen arbetar.

The man works.

en man → mannen

Dagen är vacker.

The day is beautiful.

en dag → dagen

Jag ställer en fråga.

I ask a question.

indefinite: en fråga

Vägen är lång.

The road is long.

en väg → vägen

4Common Ett-Words to Know

While fewer in number, ett-words include many important everyday nouns. Countries, languages, and many borrowed international words often belong to this category. Memorizing the most common ett-words will prevent many mistakes. Pay special attention to these as learners often assume all nouns are en-words.

Common Ett-Words

SwedishDefiniteEnglish
ett åråreta/the year
ett ordordeta/the word
ett landlandeta/the country
ett namnnamneta/the name
ett arbetearbeteta/the work/job
ett problemproblemeta/the problem

Examples

Året går fort.

The year goes fast.

ett år → året

Vad är ordet?

What is the word?

ett ord → ordet

Sverige är ett vackert land.

Sweden is a beautiful country.

indefinite: ett land

Namnet är svårt.

The name is difficult.

ett namn → namnet