SubstantivRäkneordVerbPronomenAdjektivAdverbKonjunktionerPrepositionerOrdföljd

Adjektiv

Swedish adjective declension

Basic declension

Swedish adjectives change form depending on the noun's gender (en/ett), number (singular/plural), and definiteness (indefinite/definite).

Pick an adjective, then click any cell to see how it changes. The highlighted cell shows the current form.

Special form patterns

Many adjectives follow predictable patterns when forming the ett- and plural forms. The explorer below groups these by pattern so you can learn the rules.

PatternRuleExample
-el wordsDrop e: -elt (ett), -la (pl)enkel → enkelt → enkla
-en words-en → -et (ett), -na (pl)öppen → öppet → öppna
-er wordsDrop e: -ert (ett), -ra (pl)vacker → vackert → vackra
Stressed vowelDouble t in ett-formny → nytt, blå → blått
Vowel + tDouble t in ett-formvåt → vått, söt → sött
Ends in -ttEtt identical to entrött → trött, lätt → lätt
Ends in -rt/-st/-ntEtt identical to ensvart → svart, tyst → tyst
-d → -ttVoiced d becomes voiceless ttröd → rött, glad → glatt
-ld/-nd/-rd-ld→-lt, -nd→-nt, -rd→-rtmild → milt, ond → ont
-m wordsEtt: -mt. Plural doubles mtom → tomt → tomma
-nn words-nn → -nt in ett-formsann → sant, tunn → tunt

Komparation (comparison)

Swedish has four comparison groups. Most adjectives add -are/-ast (group 1). Some short adjectives use -re/-st with vowel change (group 2). A few are completely irregular (group 3). Long adjectives use mer/mest (group 4).

GruppPositivKomparativSuperlativ
1 (-are/-ast)roligroligareroligast
2 (-re/-st)storstörrestörst
3 (irregular)brabättrebäst
3 (irregular)dåligsämre/värresämst/värst
3 (irregular)litenmindreminst
3 (irregular)gammaläldreäldst
4 (mer/mest)praktiskmer praktiskmest praktisk

Explorer


Examples

Practice exercises