BasicAvancerad

Pronomen Avancerad

Advanced Swedish pronouns

Relativa pronomen

Relative pronouns refer back to the nearest preceding word, phrase, or clause (= korrelat). Som is the most common; vilken/vilket/vilka replaces som after prepositions (formal). Vars is the genitive form. Vilket can refer to an entire clause. Vad (som) needs no korrelat and often follows allt. You can omit som when it is not the subject of the relative clause. Relative clauses follow bisatsordföljd.

PronomenSyftningExempel
somsubstantiv/pronomen (sg & pl)Mannen som bor här är läkare.
vilken/vilket/vilkaefter preposition (formellt)Kassaskåpet, i vilket de förvarar smycken…
vars (vilkas)genitivTrädet vars löv skiftar i färger…
vilket / något somverb, verbfras eller hel satsSverige förlorade, vilket var oväntat.
vad (som) = det (som)inget korrelat behövsVad som förvånar mig är att…

Determinativa pronomen

Determinative pronouns point forward, usually to a relative clause that cannot be omitted. The noun after a determinative pronoun is usually in indefinite form. Independently: den som, det som, de som.

En-ordEtt-ordPlural
Förenadedendetde
Självständigaden (dens)detde; dem

Demonstrativa pronomen

Demonstrative pronouns point out what is being referred to. They are usually stressed and can refer both backward and forward. Denna/detta/dessa is mostly written language. Denne (masculine) replaces a personal pronoun for clarity in formal style. Densamma/detsamma/desamma = the same one.

En-ordEtt-ordPlural
den här / den därden härdet härde här
denna (formellt)dennadettadessa
denne (mask.)denne
sådansådan (sån)sådant (sånt)sådana (såna)
sammasammasammasamma
densammadensammadetsammadesamma
dylikdylikdyliktdylika

Indefinita pronomen – man

Man functions as a personal pronoun with a complete set of forms. Object: en (or sig reflexive). Possessive: ens. Reflexive possessive: sin/sitt/sina.

SubjektObjektReflexivtPossessivtRefl. possessivt
manensigenssin, sitt, sina

Indefinita pronomen – negation

As an object, use inte + någon/något/några instead of ingen/inget/inga in two cases: (1) main clauses with compound tense, particle verbs, or verb + preposition; (2) all subordinate clauses. In simple main clauses as subject, ingen is used directly.

Syftning — pronomenreferens

A pronoun must clearly refer to one specific word, phrase, or clause. Ambiguous reference is a common error. Key rules: (1) a relative clause with som should follow its referent immediately; (2) sin/sitt/sina vs hans/hennes must match the correct subject; (3) vilket referring to a whole clause should not be confused with som referring to a single noun.


Explorer


Examples

Practice exercises