Ég fer í búð.

Word
Ég fer í búð.
Meaning
I go to a store.
Part of speech
sentence
Pronunciation
Lesson

Breakdown of Ég fer í búð.

ég
I
fara
to go
í
to
búð
the store
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Icelandic grammar and vocabulary.

Start learning Icelandic now

Questions & Answers about Ég fer í búð.

What does Ég mean in this sentence?
Ég is the Icelandic subject pronoun that translates to "I" in English. It indicates that the speaker is the one performing the action.
What form of the verb fer is used here, and what does it signify?
Fer is the first person singular present tense form of the verb að fara, meaning "to go." In this sentence, it shows that the speaker is currently going (or habitually goes) somewhere.
How is the preposition í functioning in this sentence?
Í is used to express movement toward a location. It is equivalent to "to" or "into" in English. Here, it indicates that the action of going is directed toward a destination.
What does búð mean, and why does its form appear unchanged?
Búð means "shop" or "store." In Icelandic, some nouns—especially short ones like búð—do not visibly change form between certain cases. In this sentence, búð is an indefinite noun used after a preposition indicating motion (accusative case), but its form remains the same as the base form.
Why is there no article such as "the" before búð in the sentence?
Icelandic handles definiteness differently from English. The sentence uses the indefinite form búð, meaning just "shop." If the speaker intended to refer to a specific shop (i.e., "the shop"), the noun would be inflected to búðin. Since no emphasis on a particular shop is given here, no definite article is attached.

You've reached your AI usage limit

Sign up to increase your limit.