Ég sé þetta.

Breakdown of Ég sé þetta.

ég
I
sjá
to see
þetta
this
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Questions & Answers about Ég sé þetta.

What does each word in the sentence Ég sé þetta. mean?
Ég means I, is the first-person singular present tense of the verb að sjá (to see), and þetta means this. So the literal translation is I see this.
How is the verb conjugated in Icelandic, and is it irregular?
is the first-person singular present tense form of að sjá. The verb is irregular; for example, its conjugation includes Ég sé (I see), þú sér (you see), hann/hún/það sér (he/she/it sees), við sjáum (we see), þið sjáið (you all see), and þeir/þær/þau sjá (they see). Because these forms do not follow a regular pattern, að sjá is considered an irregular verb.
Why is the object þetta in neuter form?
Icelandic uses three grammatical genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Þetta is the neuter demonstrative pronoun for this. Its neuter form is used either because the implied object is neuter or because the demonstrative is being used in a general or unspecified sense.
Does the sentence follow a subject–verb–object (SVO) word order like English?
Yes, the sentence Ég sé þetta. follows the SVO order—subject (Ég), then verb (), and finally object (þetta). This similarity can help English speakers get comfortable with basic Icelandic sentence structure, even though Icelandic’s flexible word order can vary for emphasis or stylistic reasons.
Do Icelandic sentences require the explicit use of a subject pronoun like Ég?
Yes, in Icelandic the subject pronoun is normally expressed. Unlike languages such as Spanish or Italian, where the verb endings often make the subject clear enough to omit the pronoun, Icelandic typically includes the subject (in this case, Ég) to maintain clarity.