Indefinite Nouns have articles before nouns, as mentioned below:
en häst – a hourse
ett djur – an animal
en man – a man
ett äpple – an apple
en kat – a cat
ett barn – a child
en kvinna – e woman
ett bord – a table
Definite nouns have the articles after the noun, as mentioned below:
hästen – the man
djuret – the animal
mannen – the man
äpplet – the apple
katen – the cat
barnet – the child
kvinnan – the woman
bordet – the board
Nouns which take en as the indefinite article are called ‘en words’ and those that take ett are called ‘ett words’. There is no specific role to understand how to choose en/ett for a noun. But almost 80% nouns are en nouns. That means, if you do not know the article of the noun, you can place ”en” with the noun. Therefore, You will 80% chances to be correct.
The idea is that you should learn the noun together with its indefinite article, because you need to know if a noun is an en word or an ett word to be able to choose the right form of the definite article and several other grammatical points.
While, You can predict the gender from the meaning of noun!
In newspaper texts, about 75% of all nouns are non-neuter (en gender).
Human beings: Most, but not all, nouns denoting human beings are non-neuter (en gender):
For example:
en kille ‘a boy’; en kvinna ‘a woman’; en polis ‘a police officer’; en dotter ‘a daughter’; en son ‘a son’; en syster ‘a sister’; en kusin ‘a cousin’;
There are just a few common exceptions: ett barn ‘a child’ is among the most frequent, and there are a few others, including ett syskon ‘a sibling’ and ett biträde ‘an assistant’.
Animals: Most higher animals are non-neuter (en gender):
For examples:
en katt ‘a cat’; en råtta ‘a rat’; en häst ‘a horse’; en ånsa ‘a donkey’; en hund ‘a dog’; en kanin ‘a rabbit’; en mus ‘a mouse’; en elefant ‘an elephant’; en fågel ‘a bird’; en anka ‘a duck’; en delfin ‘a dolphin’; en björn ‘a bear’; en varg ‘a wolf’; en spindel ‘a spider’; en orm ‘a snake’; en kamel ‘a camel’; en get ‘a goat’; en höna ‘a chicken’; en ko ‘a cow’.
There are rather more exceptions here: ett svin ‘a pig’; ett får ‘a sheep’; ett lejon ‘a lion’; ett bi ‘a bee’; ett djur ‘an animal’.
Periods of time: Words for periods of time such as days, parts of the day, months and seasons are nearly always non-neuter (en gender):
For Examples:
en minut ‘a minute’; en dag ‘a day’; en vecka ‘a week’; en vår ‘a spring’
But there are a few exceptions: ett dygn ‘a day’ (24-hour period); ett år ‘a year’.
Plants: Trees, flowers and shrubs are usually non-neuter (en gender):
For Examples:
en ek ‘an oak tree’; en ros ‘a rose’
But notice: ett träd ‘a tree’.
While, Names of continents, countries, regions and towns: The names of continents and many countries, regions and towns are neuter by gender. However, as these names rarely have articles or plurals, their neuter gender is only usually shown by the adjectives that are used with them. So, This is called ‘hidden agreement’:
Europa var splittrat i många små kungariken.
Europe was divided into many small kingdoms.
Norge var chanslöst mot Finland.
Norway had no chance against Finland.
Göteborg är underbart i solen.
Gothenburg is wonderful in the sunshine.
Non-neuter (en gender)
So, Most words ending in following categories, will be in en ords:
–a:
en flicka ‘a girl’; en krona ‘a crown’; en resa ‘a journey’; en skola ‘a school’
–are:
en läkare ‘a doctor’; en göteborgare ‘a Gothenburger’
–else:
en berättelse ‘a story’; en betydelse ‘a meaning’
–het:
en lägenhet ‘an apartment’; en möjlighet ‘an opportunity’
–ing:
en tidning ‘a newspaper’; en tävling ‘a competition’
Neuter (ett gender)
Most words (except those denoting people) ending in:
–ande:
ett avgörande ‘a decision’; ett bemötande ‘a reception’; ett uppträdande ‘a performance’
–ende:
ett ärende ‘a task’; ett leende ‘a smile’
Exceptions: Words denoting people: en studerande ‘a student’; en gående ‘a pedestrian’
–um:
ett museum ‘a museum’; ett faktum ‘a fact’
So, From the rules given above, predict the gender by adding the indefinite article en or ett:
——— album (album),————-stockholmare (Stockholmer)
———bakelse (pastry), ———–lidande (suffering)
———regering (government), ——– lärare (teacher)
———förhållande (relationship), ———- nyhet (piece of news)
———gymnasium (upper secondary school), ————påstående (assertion)
———rörelse (movement),———- jubileum (anniversary)
———-svårighet (difficulty), ——–kappa (woman’s coat)
———-övning (exercise)
Grattis! (Congratulations!) So, You’re now prepared to tackle articles, genders & basic sentence structure in Swedish language.
Learn Swedish A1: Possessiva Pronomen Lesson 16
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