Ég fer í þorpið.

Breakdown of Ég fer í þorpið.

ég
I
fara
to go
í
to
þorpið
the village
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Questions & Answers about Ég fer í þorpið.

What does the preposition í mean in Ég fer í þorpið, and why does it take the accusative case here?

In Icelandic, í can mean both in/inside and to/into, depending on context:

  • When indicating location (static), í takes the dative: Ég er í þorpinu (I am in the village).
  • When indicating movement or direction, í takes the accusative: Ég fer í þorpið (I go/I'm going to the village).
Why is the definite article not a separate word like in English, but attached to þorp as -ið?
Icelandic forms the definite article as a suffix on nouns. Þorp is a neuter noun. Its definite singular form in both nominative and accusative is þorpið (stem þorp + definite suffix -ið).
How can I tell that þorpið is in the accusative case and not the nominative?

Neuter nouns have the same form for nominative and accusative in the singular, so þorpið looks identical whether it’s subject or object. You know it’s accusative here because:
1) Ég is the subject in the nominative.
2) The preposition í (with movement) requires the accusative.

What is the present-tense conjugation of the irregular verb fara (to go)?

Here is fara in the present tense:

  • Ég fer
  • Þú ferð
  • Hann/Hún/Það fer
  • Við förum
  • Þið farið
  • Þeir/Þær/Þau fara
How do I pronounce Ég fer í þorpið correctly?
  • Ég: [jɛːɣ] – like “yehg,” with a long e and a voiced g (fricative).
  • fer: [fɛːr] – similar to English “fair” but with an unrounded ɛ.
  • í: [iː] – a long “ee.”
  • þorpið: [ˈθɔr̥pɪð]
    þ = unvoiced “th” as in “think.”
    o = open o ([ɔ]).
    r = a tapped r.
    = [ɪð], with ð like the “th” in “this.”
Why is the verb placed second in this sentence?
Icelandic main clauses generally follow the V2 (verb-second) word order. The finite verb appears in the second position, regardless of what comes first. Here the subject Ég is first, and fer is second.
If I want to express “I will go to the village” in the future, do I need a different form?

Ég fer í þorpið can imply a near-future departure. To explicitly mark future, you can use:

  • Ég mun fara í þorpið (I will go to the village).
  • Ég ætla að fara í þorpið (I intend to go to the village).