Questions & Answers about Síminn hennar er bilaður.
What do the individual words mean and what are their grammatical roles?
- Síminn = “the phone”; noun, masculine, nominative singular, definite (base form sími
- definite ending -inn).
- hennar = “her”; independent possessive pronoun in the genitive; placed after the noun.
- er = “is”; 3rd person singular present of vera “to be”.
- bilaður = “broken/out of order”; adjective used for machines, serving as a predicative complement agreeing with the subject.
Why is the possessive after the noun (síminn hennar) instead of before it?
Can I say Hennar sími er bilaður?
Can I drop the definite article and say Sími hennar er bilaður?
Why is it síminn and not símann or síma?
Because it’s the subject, so it’s nominative singular definite: síminn.
- símann = accusative singular definite (e.g., as a direct object).
- símanum = dative singular definite.
- símans = genitive singular definite. (Indefinite singular oblique forms are síma.)
Why does the adjective end in -aður (bilaður)?
Adjectives agree with the noun’s gender, number, and case. Síminn is masculine nominative singular, so the adjective is bilaður (m). Other forms:
- Feminine: biluð (e.g., Tölvan hennar er biluð).
- Neuter: bilað (e.g., Sjónvarpið hennar er bilað).
Can I use brotinn instead of bilaður?
Usually no.
- bilaður = not working/out of order (typical for devices).
- brotinn = broken in pieces/physically cracked or smashed.
Examples: Síminn er bilaður (won’t turn on); Skjárinn er brotinn (the screen is cracked).
What case is hennar, and does it change?
Hennar is the genitive of hún (“she”) used for possession. As a possessive, it’s invariable (it stays hennar regardless of the noun’s case):
- Ég hringdi í símann hennar (accusative on the noun, hennar unchanged).
Related forms: hans (his), þeirra (their), also invariable.
Could I use the reflexive possessive sinn here?
Not in this sentence. Sinn refers back to a 3rd-person subject within the same clause. Here, the subject is síminn (“the phone”), so to say it belongs to a woman, use hennar.
What exactly is er?
It’s the 3rd person singular present of vera (“to be”). Present forms:
- ég er; þú ert; hann/hún/það er; við erum; þið eruð; þeir/þær/þau eru.
How do you pronounce the sentence?
Approximate guide:
- Síminn ≈ “SEE-minn” (long ee sound in sí; stress on the first syllable).
- hennar ≈ “HEN-nar” (double n is clearly long).
- er ≈ “air” with a tapped/trilled r.
- bilaður ≈ “BEE-lah-thur” (ð like the th in “this”; final -ur with a short u like in “put”).
Icelandic stress is on the first syllable of each word.
How would I say similar sentences with other genders or people?
- Masculine: Síminn hans er bilaður (“His phone is broken”).
- Feminine: Tölvan hennar er biluð (“Her computer is broken”).
- Neuter: Sjónvarpið þeirra er bilað (“Their TV is broken”).
Keep adjective agreement: bilaður (m), biluð (f), bilað (n).
How do I say “Her phone has broken down” (event) instead of the state “is broken”?
Use the verb bila for the event:
- Simple past: Síminn hennar bilaði (“Her phone broke down”).
- Present perfect: Síminn hennar hefur bilað (“Her phone has broken down”).
The original sentence with er bilaður describes the resulting state.
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