Breakdown of Lad være med at drikke kaffe om aftenen, hvis du vil gå i seng tidligt.
Questions & Answers about Lad være med at drikke kaffe om aftenen, hvis du vil gå i seng tidligt.
What does lad være med at mean, and why is it used here?
Lad være med at is a very common Danish way to say don’t do something.
So:
- Lad være med at drikke kaffe = Don’t drink coffee
Literally, it is something like leave off from doing or refrain from doing, but in normal English the best translation is simply don’t.
It is especially common in spoken and everyday Danish, and learners will see it a lot.
Why is there an at before drikke?
After lad være med, Danish normally uses at + infinitive.
So the pattern is:
- lad være med at + verb
Examples:
- Lad være med at ryge. = Don’t smoke.
- Lad være med at larme. = Don’t make noise.
Here:
- drikke = to drink
- at drikke = to drink
So at is there because drikke is in the infinitive after this expression.
Could you also say Drik ikke kaffe om aftenen?
Yes. Drik ikke kaffe om aftenen is also correct and means the same basic thing.
The difference is mostly in style and tone:
- Drik ikke kaffe om aftenen = a more direct negative command
- Lad være med at drikke kaffe om aftenen = often sounds a little more natural, conversational, or less abrupt
Danish very often prefers lad være med at for negative imperatives, especially in everyday speech.
What does om aftenen mean exactly?
Om aftenen means in the evening(s) or in the evening depending on context.
In this sentence, it means something like:
- in the evening
- during the evening
The phrase is built like this:
- om = in/during
- aftenen = the evening
Danish often uses om with parts of the day in general time expressions:
- om morgenen = in the morning
- om eftermiddagen = in the afternoon
- om aftenen = in the evening
- om natten = at night / during the night
Why is it aftenen and not just aften?
In this kind of time expression, Danish usually uses the definite form:
- morgenen
- aftenen
- natten
So om aftenen is the normal idiomatic phrase.
Even though English says in the evening with the, Danish builds it into the noun ending:
- aften = evening
- aftenen = the evening
So om aftenen is the natural fixed expression.
Why is it hvis and not om for if?
In Danish, hvis is the usual word for if in conditional sentences.
So:
- hvis du vil gå i seng tidligt = if you want to go to bed early
Danish om can sometimes mean whether/if, but usually not in the same way as English conditional if.
For example:
- Jeg ved ikke, om han kommer. = I don’t know whether he is coming.
But in your sentence, the meaning is conditional, so hvis is the correct choice.
What does vil mean here? Is it will as in the future?
Here vil means want to, not simple future.
So:
- du vil gå i seng tidligt = you want to go to bed early
That is a very important point, because English will often marks the future, but Danish vil frequently means want to or be willing to.
If you translated it too literally as future will, you might misunderstand the sentence.
Here the idea is:
- if you want to go to bed early
not
- if you will go to bed early
What does gå i seng mean literally, and why isn’t there an article before seng?
Gå i seng literally means go in(to) bed, but in normal English we say go to bed.
It is a fixed expression in Danish:
- gå i seng = go to bed
- være i seng = be in bed
There is no article because Danish often uses fixed idiomatic expressions without one, just as English does in some cases.
Compare:
- Han er i skole. = He is at school.
- Hun går i seng tidligt. = She goes to bed early.
So you should learn gå i seng as a set phrase.
Why is it tidligt and not tidlig?
Because tidligt is being used as an adverb here.
- tidlig = early (adjective form)
- tidligt = early (adverb form)
In this sentence, tidligt describes the verb phrase gå i seng:
- gå i seng tidligt = go to bed early
That is why Danish uses the -t form.
Compare:
- en tidlig morgen = an early morning
- han kom tidligt = he arrived early
Can the order of the two clauses be reversed?
Yes, absolutely.
You can also say:
- Hvis du vil gå i seng tidligt, så lad være med at drikke kaffe om aftenen.
This means the same thing.
When the hvis clause comes first, the main clause still follows normal Danish main-clause word order. You will often see så after the conditional clause, but it is not always required.
So both are natural:
- Lad være med at drikke kaffe om aftenen, hvis du vil gå i seng tidligt.
- Hvis du vil gå i seng tidligt, så lad være med at drikke kaffe om aftenen.
Is this sentence talking about one specific evening or evenings in general?
Usually it means evenings in general.
Because of om aftenen, the sentence sounds like general advice:
- Don’t drink coffee in the evening if you want to go to bed early.
If you wanted to talk about this evening, Danish would usually use something like:
- i aften = tonight / this evening
So there is a clear difference:
- om aftenen = in the evening, generally
- i aften = tonight, this specific evening
What tense is the sentence in?
There is no past tense here.
The sentence contains:
- an imperative: Lad være
- infinitives: at drikke, gå
- a present-tense verb: vil
But overall, the sentence is giving advice or a command, not describing a past or completed action.
So the structure is basically:
- negative command
- conditional clause
That is why it feels timeless and general rather than tied to a specific moment in the past or future.
How would a native speaker probably stress this sentence in speech?
A natural stress pattern would usually emphasize the key meaning words:
Lad være med at drikke kaffe om aftenen, hvis du vil gå i seng tidligt.
The strongest stress often falls on words like:
- drikke
- kaffe
- aftenen
- gå i seng
- tidligt
Small grammar words like med, at, du, and sometimes hvis are usually less stressed.
So in natural speech, the sentence flows more by meaning than word-by-word pronunciation.
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