1.1 Declension of pronouns
In Norse, nouns and pronouns are declined in cases. What on earth does that mean? We will use English as a starting point to explain. Consider the English sentence: “She loves me.” If you have learnt syntax you will know that the “subject” of this sentence is the pronoun “she” and the “object” is the pronoun “me”. If you haven’t learnt syntax I’ll let you in on the trick; the subject in a sentence is the word that is doing stuff, the object is the word stuff is done to. So, in our sentence “she” is doing stuff and it’s being done to “me”. Simple.
Now let’s look at another sentence: “I love her.” Okay, now “I” is doing stuff, so “I” is the subject, and it’s being done to “her” which must then be the object. Now consider; how does the English language distinguish between subject and object in a sentence? As you will see from our example there are two methods:
1. Changing the word order. You will note that the word preceding the verb is the subject whereas the word following the verb is the object.
2. Changing the form of the words. Aha! This is where things get interesting. Of course the “she” in the first sentence is the same person as the “her” in the second sentence, similarly the “I” and “me” refer to the same bloke. We say the word itself hasn’t changed, only the form of it. We’ll make a little table:
Subject: | I | you | he | she | it |
Object: | me | you | him | her | it |
You will note that sometimes the word changes completely when switching between the roles of subject and object, like “I” to “me”, sometimes it changes but remains recognisably the same, like “he” to “him”, and sometimes it doesn’t change at all, like “you” to “you”.
Now we have seen that English uses different forms of pronouns to represent subject and object but those different forms are also used for other things. Let’s look at the sentence “I am he.” Something strange has happened; preceding the verb there is a pronoun in the subject form, well and good, but following the verb is a pronoun that is also in the subject form. The explanation lies in the verb we’re using; the verb “to be” doesn’t really describe “stuff being done” (as we have so eloquently put it in this passage). It’s more like an equals sign: “I = he”. In such cases the word following the verb is called neither object nor subject but “complement”.
Now that we’ve found a new use for our subject form we’ll have to redo our table:
Subject, complement: | I | you | he | she | it |
Object: | me | you | him | her | it |
Now we might wonder whether there is another use for the object form as well. Indeed there is; consider the sentence “I saved it for him”. Here “I” is the subject and “it” is the object, as you will have realised, but what about “him”? It’s not following a verb so it can’t be an object but it’s still in the object form. We conclude that words following a preposition take the object form. Again we have to redo our table:
Subject, complement: | I | you | he | she | it |
Object, prepositional: | me | you | him | her | it |
Now that we’ve found more than one use for both of our forms we’ll name those forms for easy reference. We’ll call them nominative and accusative and we’ll refer to them collectively as the cases of the pronouns. We’ll call this changing of forms by the pronouns declension.
Nominative case: | I | you | he | she | it |
Accusative case: | me | you | him | her | it |
Remember what we stated at the beginning of this section? “In Norse, nouns and pronouns are declined in cases”. Now we can state: “In English, pronouns are declined in cases”. The beauty of it is that the Norse cases of nominative and accusative work exactly like the English cases we have been defining. Thus the nominative in Norse serves as subject and compliment and the accusative as object and prepositional. The Norse table corresponding to the English table above looks like this:
Nominative case: | ek | þú | hann | hon | þat |
Accusative case: | mik | þik | hann | hana | þat |
You notice a slight resemblance between the two tables. You also note that, as with English, when the pronouns go from nominative to accusative they sometimes change much (ek – mik), sometimes little (hon – hana) and sometimes not at all (hann – hann).
1.2 Declension of nouns
In the Norse language, nouns, like pronouns, are declined in cases. Again we start by discussing English. Consider the sentence “Peter calls Maggie.” Here the subject is “Peter” and the object is “Maggie”. Now another sentence: “Maggie calls Peter.” The roles of subject and object have been switched, but how? Not by changing the forms of the words, as with the pronouns, but solely by changing the word order. In contrast, Norse solves the problem of distinguishing between subject and object with case endings and not word order.
Now to the good stuff. Norse nouns are declined in cases. That is, the form of the nouns change depending on whether they play the role of nominative or accusative. The wonderful science of grammar puts nouns into different groups depending on their declension pattern. The first group we will look at is called “strong masculine”; accept those terms as arbitrary for now.
The pattern of the strong masculine word is that they have the ending -r in the nominative. We’ll look at some examples from our vocabulary in 2.1.
Singular of the strong masculine declension:
Nominative: | álfr | baugr | Haukr | konungr |
Accusative: | álf | baug | Hauk | konung |
Note that proper names (like Haukr here) are declined in cases like any other nouns.
1.3 Article
In English there are two kinds of articles; the indefinite article “a and an” and the definite article “the”. The Norse language has no indefinite article, thus “draugr” by itself means “a ghost”. Norse, however, does have a definite article though it doesn’t work quite like the English one. Rather than being a small unchanging word preceding nouns the Norse article is a suffix depending on case, gender and number. For the masculine words we’ve introduced the article in both nominative singular and accusative singular is “-inn” tacked on to the words. Thus:
| Indefinite | Definite |
---|
Nominative | álfr | álfrinn |
Accusative | álf | álfinn |
or in so many words:
álfr = an elf (nominative) | álfrinn = the elf (nominative) |
álf = an elf (accusative) | álfinn = the elf (accusative) |
1.4 Gender of nouns
We said before that the group of nouns we’re looking at is called strong masculine. The “strong” classification is arbitrary but we’re going to let you in on the masculine thing. Every word in Norse has an arbitrary “gender”, masculine, feminine or neuter. When we refer to a word with a certain gender we have to use the pronoun with the same gender. Thus masculine nouns take the masculine pronoun (hann=he), feminine nouns take the feminine pronoun (hon=she) and neuter nouns take the neuter pronoun (þat=it). Since all the nouns used in this chapter are masculine you’ll be concerned with “hann” for now.
1.5 Notes on word order
Word order in English is quite rigid. For a simple sentence it’s always “subject-verb-object”. In Norse this is not so, the word order is quite free, mainly because the information about which word plays which role is given by grammatical endings (cases and more) whereas English relies on word order to convey this information. Remember to check the grammatical ending of Norse words to find their place in the sentence.
This is not to say that there aren’t certain conventions on word order in Norse. Most often there is one thing that is most natural but be prepared to meet anything.
In Norse, titles usually follow the name they refer to; thus ‘king Óláfr’ is ‘Óláfr konungr’.