Satsdelar Basic


The Sentence Analyzer

Pick a label, click the words — colour-code every sentence part.

Swedish sentence parts

De viktigaste satsdelarna

Every Swedish sentence is built from sentence parts (satsdelar). The most important are subjekt (who/what does something), predikat (the verb — what happens), objekt (who/what is affected), and adverbial (where, when, how, why). Understanding satsdelar is key to mastering Swedish ordföljd (word order).

SatsdelFrågaExempel
SubjektVem? Vad?Stormen har varat i tre dagar.
Predikat (verb)Vad gör/händer?Stormen har varat i tre dagar.
Direkt objektVem? Vad? (efter verb)Jag läser en bok.
Indirekt objektTill/åt/för vem?Karl ger sin fru blommor.
AdverbialVar? Vart? När? Hur? Varför?Jag arbetar utomlands.
Satsadverbialmodifierar hela satsenHon kommer förmodligen imorgon.
Attributbestämmer substantivVi har en stor släkt.
Predikatsfyllnadefter vara/bli/verkaEva är sjuksköterska.

Satsschemat — hur satsdelar placeras

In a Swedish main clause (huvudsats), the verb MUST be in second position (V2-regeln). The first position (fundament) can hold any sentence part. In a subordinate clause (bisats), satsadverbial like inte moves before the verb. The sentence schema helps visualize where each part goes.

FundamentVerbSubjektSatsadv.Verb 2Objekt/Adv.
HuvudsatsJagläserinteboken
Huvudsats (inv.)Igårlästejaginteboken
Bisatsattjaginteläserboken

Hur man hittar satsdelarna

To identify sentence parts, use the question method. Ask Vem/Vad + verb? to find the subject. Ask Vad gör + subject? to find the predicate. Ask Vem/Vad? after the verb to find the object. Ask Var/När/Hur/Varför? to find adverbials. Attribut are always next to their noun.

Subjekt som inte står först

In Swedish, the subject does not always come first. After adverbial openers, questions, and in some relative clauses, the subject moves. This is called inversion. Being able to identify the subject regardless of position is essential for correct word order.


Explorer


Examples

Practice exercises