Breakdown of Ég borðaði morgunmat klukkan sjö í morgun.
Questions & Answers about Ég borðaði morgunmat klukkan sjö í morgun.
Why do we include Ég in this sentence when the verb ending already shows who’s doing the action?
What is borðaði, and how does it relate to the infinitive form of the verb?
borðaði is the past‐tense (preterite) form of borða (to eat) for first person singular. It’s a weak verb in the –a class, which in the past tense adds the dental suffix –aði. So
• infinitive: borða
• ég-form past: borðaði
What case is morgunmat in, and why doesn’t it end in –ur like the dictionary form?
Why do we say klukkan sjö to mean “at seven o’clock” instead of just sjö?
Why is klukkan in the definite form here?
Why does morgun appear twice—in morgunmat and in í morgun—and do they mean the same thing?
They share the root morgun (“morning”) but function differently.
• morgunmat is a compound noun meaning “morning‐meal” (breakfast).
• í morgun is an adverbial phrase (“this morning”) formed with the preposition í plus the accusative morgun. They refer to the same general time of day, but one names a meal and the other marks when the action happened.
Can we move í morgun or klukkan sjö to a different position in the sentence?
Yes—but you must respect Icelandic’s V2 (verb‐second) rule. For example:
• Í morgun borðaði ég morgunmat klukkan sjö. (Time first, verb second.)
You cannot say Ég í morgun borðaði… because the finite verb must occupy the second position in a main clause.
Could we omit klukkan and simply say sjö í morgun?
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