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B1 Swedish GrammarParticipial Adjectives

Use present and past participles as adjectives in Swedish. The present participle (-ande/-ende) describes ongoing actions, while the past participle (-ad/-d/-t/-en) describes completed states. Master their agreement patterns and positions in sentences.

1Present Participle as Adjective (-ande/-ende)

The present participle ends in -ande (Group 1 verbs) or -ende (other verbs) and describes an ongoing quality or action. It NEVER changes form - no agreement with gender, number, or definiteness. It typically expresses what something IS DOING or its characteristic activity.

Present Participle Formation

InfinitivePresent ParticipleEnglish
sovasovandesleeping
leleendesmiling
arbetaarbetandeworking
brinnabrinnandeburning
överraskaöverraskandesurprising

Examples

En sovande bebis lÄg i vagnen.

A sleeping baby lay in the stroller.

sovande = sleeping (ongoing action)

Hon hade ett leende ansikte.

She had a smiling face.

leende = smiling (characteristic)

Det var en överraskande nyhet.

It was surprising news.

överraskande never changes form

De brinnande ljusen lyste upp rummet.

The burning candles lit up the room.

brinnande = burning (active process)

2Past Participle as Adjective

The past participle describes a completed state or result. Unlike the present participle, it MUST agree with the noun in gender and number. Group 1 verbs: -ad/-at/-ade. Group 2-4 verbs: -d/-t/-da or -en/-et/-na. This is the same form used in perfect tenses.

Past Participle Agreement

VerbEn-wordEtt-wordPlural/Definite
stÀngastÀngdstÀngtstÀngda
öppnaöppnadöppnatöppnade
skrivaskrivenskrivetskrivna
brytabrutenbrutetbrutna

Examples

Dörren Àr stÀngd.

The door is closed.

en dörr → stĂ€ngd (en-word)

Fönstret Àr stÀngt.

The window is closed.

ett fönster → stĂ€ngt (ett-word)

En skriven text Àr lÀttare att minnas.

A written text is easier to remember.

skriva → skriven (strong verb)

De brutna fönstren mÄste bytas ut.

The broken windows must be replaced.

plural: bruten → brutna

3Meaning Differences: Present vs Past

The choice between present and past participle changes the meaning significantly. Present participle = active, ongoing (the thing DOES something). Past participle = passive, completed (something was DONE to it). Compare: 'en intresserad person' (interested) vs 'en intressant bok' (interesting).

Present vs Past Participle

Present (-ing active)Past (-ed passive)Key Difference
överraskande (surprising)överraskad (surprised)causes vs feels
irriterande (annoying)irriterad (annoyed)causes vs feels
intresserande (interesting)intresserad (interested)causes vs feels
tröttsam (tiring)trött (tired)causes vs feels

Examples

Filmen var överraskande.

The movie was surprising.

the movie surprises (active)

Jag var överraskad av slutet.

I was surprised by the ending.

I received the surprise (passive)

Det Àr en intressant bok.

It's an interesting book.

the book creates interest

Är du intresserad av konst?

Are you interested in art?

you have interest (past participle)

4Position and Extended Use

Participial adjectives can come before nouns (attributive) or after verbs like 'vara' or 'bli' (predicative). When before nouns, they follow normal Swedish adjective patterns. Extended participle phrases (with additional words) typically come after the noun or use relative clauses.

Attributive vs Predicative

PositionExampleEnglish
Attributivedet stÀngda fönstretthe closed window
Predicativefönstret Àr stÀngtthe window is closed
Extendedmannen, sittande pÄ bÀnkenthe man, sitting on the bench
Relativemannen som sitter pÄ bÀnkenthe man who sits on the bench

Examples

Den skrivna rapporten ligger pÄ bordet.

The written report is on the table.

attributive: before definite noun

Barnet sov i den stÀngda bilen.

The child slept in the closed car.

stÀngda agrees with definite 'bilen'

En man sittande vid fönstret vinkade.

A man sitting by the window waved.

extended participle phrase

Brevet, skrivet för lÀnge sedan, hittades igÄr.

The letter, written long ago, was found yesterday.

past participle phrase