Breakdown of Himlen bliver mørkere, når det begynder at regne.
Questions & Answers about Himlen bliver mørkere, når det begynder at regne.
What does himlen mean grammatically, and why is it not himmelen?
Himlen is the definite singular form of himmel.
- himmel = sky / a sky
- himlen = the sky
In Danish, the definite article is usually added to the end of the noun instead of standing in front of it. So Danish often says himmel + -en rather than using a separate word for the.
The reason it becomes himlen instead of himmelen is that nouns ending in -el often drop the unstressed e before the ending:
- himmel → himlen
- cykel → cyklen
So this is a normal spelling pattern, not an irregular exception you just have to memorize.
Why is bliver used instead of er?
Because bliver shows a change, while er just describes a state.
- Himlen er mørk = the sky is dark
- Himlen bliver mørkere = the sky gets/becomes darker
So in this sentence, the sky is not simply being described as dark. It is changing and becoming darker. That is why bliver is the natural choice.
What does mørkere mean, and how is it formed?
Mørkere is the comparative form of mørk.
- mørk = dark
- mørkere = darker
A very common way to form the comparative in Danish is to add -ere:
- stor → større
- kold → koldere
- mørk → mørkere
So Himlen bliver mørkere literally has the sense of The sky becomes darker.
Why is når used here?
Når is used for when in the sense of something that happens generally, repeatedly, or as a normal consequence.
In this sentence, it expresses something like:
- whenever it starts to rain
- when it starts to rain
That makes når the right choice.
Useful comparison:
- når = when / whenever
- da = when, but usually for one specific event in the past
- hvis = if
So:
- Når det begynder at regne, bliver himlen mørkere = when/whenever it starts to rain, the sky gets darker
- Da det begyndte at regne... = when it started to rain... on a specific past occasion
Why is there a det in det begynder at regne?
This det is an impersonal or dummy subject, much like English it in it is raining or it starts to rain.
Weather expressions in Danish usually need det:
- Det regner = it is raining
- Det sner = it is snowing
- Det blæser = it is windy / it is blowing
So det begynder at regne literally works like it begins to rain.
The det does not refer to a specific thing. It is just there because Danish grammar requires a subject in this kind of sentence.
Why is it at regne after begynder?
Because at marks the infinitive, like English to.
- regne = rain
- at regne = to rain
After begynde, Danish normally uses at + infinitive:
- begynde at regne = begin to rain
- begynde at læse = begin to read
- begynde at arbejde = begin to work
So det begynder at regne is the normal structure.
What tense are bliver and begynder?
They are both in the present tense.
- bliver = present tense of blive
- begynder = present tense of begynde
In Danish, the present tense is often used for:
- general truths
- repeated events
- near-future or predictable situations
That is why the sentence can use present tense even though it describes what happens at the moment rain starts.
Also, a very common present-tense pattern in Danish is adding -r:
- blive → bliver
- begynde → begynder
- regne → regner
Could you also say Når det regner, bliver himlen mørkere?
Yes, you could, but the meaning shifts slightly.
- Når det begynder at regne focuses on the moment the rain starts.
- Når det regner means when/whenever it is raining.
So the original sentence emphasizes the beginning of the change. The alternative version is more general and less focused on that starting point.
What happens to the word order if the når clause comes first?
If the subordinate clause comes first, the main clause changes word order:
- Himlen bliver mørkere, når det begynder at regne.
- Når det begynder at regne, bliver himlen mørkere.
Notice that after the fronted når clause, Danish puts the finite verb first in the main clause:
- bliver himlen mørkere
not
- himlen bliver mørkere
This is a very important Danish word-order rule. When something other than the subject comes first, the finite verb still stays in second position in the main clause.
Is når det begynder at regne a subordinate clause?
Yes. Når introduces a subordinate clause.
The clause is:
når det begynder at regne
Inside that clause, the order is the normal subordinate-clause order:
- det = subject
- begynder = finite verb
- at regne = infinitive phrase
As a learner, it is useful to notice that Danish often keeps subordinate clauses quite straightforward internally, but the main clause may change word order if the subordinate clause is moved to the front.
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