Breakdown of Jeg går ikke ud af supermarkedet, før jeg har betalt ved kassen.
Questions & Answers about Jeg går ikke ud af supermarkedet, før jeg har betalt ved kassen.
Why is it supermarkedet and not supermarked?
Supermarkedet is the definite form of supermarked:
- et supermarked = a supermarket
- supermarkedet = the supermarket
In Danish, the definite article is usually added to the end of the noun as a suffix:
- en bil → bilen
- et hus → huset
- et supermarked → supermarkedet
So ud af supermarkedet means out of the supermarket.
What does går ud af mean here?
Går ud af means go out of / leave.
It is made up of:
- går = go / walk
- ud = out
- af = of / out of in this expression
Together, gå ud af works like a fixed expression meaning to go out of a place:
- Jeg går ud af huset = I go out of the house
- Han går ud af bilen = He gets out of the car
So in your sentence, går ud af supermarkedet means leave the supermarket.
Why is ikke placed after går?
In a normal Danish main clause, the finite verb usually comes in second position. After that, ikke often comes later.
So:
- Jeg går ikke ud af supermarkedet
has this basic structure:
- Jeg = subject
- går = finite verb
- ikke = negation
This is very common in Danish main clauses:
- Jeg spiser ikke kød
- Han kommer ikke i dag
- Vi bor ikke her
English says I do not go, but Danish does not need do-support. It simply says Jeg går ikke.
Why is it før and not another word for until?
In Danish, før can mean before, but in negative sentences like this it often corresponds to English until.
So:
- Jeg går ikke ud af supermarkedet, før jeg har betalt ved kassen
literally looks like:
- I do not go out of the supermarket, before I have paid at the checkout
but the natural English meaning is:
- I’m not leaving the supermarket until I’ve paid at the checkout
This is a very common pattern:
- Jeg går ikke i seng, før jeg er færdig.
- Han tager ikke hjem, før arbejdet er gjort.
So learners should remember: after a negative main clause, før is often best translated as until.
Why is it jeg har betalt instead of just jeg betaler?
Jeg har betalt is the present perfect and means I have paid.
It is used because the payment must be completed first before the action in the main clause happens. The speaker will not leave the supermarket until the paying is already done.
- har = have
- betalt = paid
So:
- før jeg har betalt = until I have paid
This emphasizes a finished action.
If you said før jeg betaler, it would sound less natural in this context for many learners’ intended meaning, because the idea is not just until I pay, but until I have paid — the payment must be completed.
Why does the subordinate clause say jeg har betalt and not jeg ikke har betalt or some other word order?
After før, you get a subordinate clause. In Danish subordinate clauses, the word order is different from main clauses.
Here the clause is:
- før jeg har betalt ved kassen
The usual order is:
- conjunction
- subject
- sentence adverb / negation
- finite verb
- other elements
But since there is no ikke inside this subordinate clause, you simply get:
- før
- jeg
- har
- betalt
- har
- jeg
Compare:
- Main clause: Jeg går ikke ud
- Subordinate clause: før jeg ikke går ud would place ikke before the finite verb in the subordinate clause
A useful contrast:
- Jeg kommer ikke.
- ..., fordi jeg ikke kommer.
So the sentence is normal: før jeg har betalt ved kassen.
What exactly does ved kassen mean?
Ved kassen means at the checkout, at the cash register, or at the till.
- ved = at / by / near
- kassen = the register / checkout
In a supermarket context, kassen usually means the place where you pay.
So:
- betalt ved kassen = paid at the checkout
This is more idiomatic than translating word-for-word as something like by the box, even though kasse can mean box in other contexts.
Why is it kassen and not en kasse?
Just like supermarkedet, kassen is the definite form:
- en kasse = a box / a till / a checkout
- kassen = the box / the till / the checkout
In this context, Danish often uses the definite form because it refers to the checkout area as a known part of the supermarket.
So ved kassen is the normal idiomatic way to say at the checkout.
Is this sentence in the present tense even though it can refer to the future?
Yes. Danish often uses the present tense for something that applies now, as a rule, or in a near-future sense.
So:
- Jeg går ikke ud af supermarkedet, før jeg har betalt ved kassen
can mean something like:
- I’m not leaving the supermarket until I’ve paid
- I won’t leave the supermarket until I’ve paid
Danish does not always need a separate future form like English will. The present tense is often enough when the meaning is clear from context.
Could I also say forlader supermarkedet instead of går ud af supermarkedet?
Yes, you could say:
- Jeg forlader ikke supermarkedet, før jeg har betalt ved kassen.
That means essentially the same thing: I do not leave the supermarket until I have paid at the checkout.
The difference is style:
- går ud af supermarkedet = more everyday, literal, physical go out of
- forlader supermarkedet = more formal or neutral leave
A native speaker would understand both, but går ud af feels very natural in ordinary speech.
Is af always needed after ud?
Not always. It depends on what follows.
You use ud af when you are going out of something:
- ud af huset = out of the house
- ud af bilen = out of the car
- ud af supermarkedet = out of the supermarket
But if you simply mean go outside, you often just use ud:
- Jeg går ud = I’m going out / outside
So in this sentence, af is needed because the speaker is leaving a specific place: supermarkedet.
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