Questions & Answers about Svarið er rangt, ekki satt?
Svar means answer and it’s a neuter noun. -ið is the definite article suffix for neuter singular nouns in the nominative/accusative, so svarið means the answer.
- svar = an answer
- svarið = the answer
Er is the present tense of að vera (to be) for third person singular: (he/she/it) is.
So Svarið er rangt literally corresponds to The answer is wrong.
Because it agrees with svarið, which is neuter singular. Icelandic adjectives usually agree in gender, number, and case with the noun they describe (or the subject after að vera).
- masculine sg: rangur
- feminine sg: röng
- neuter sg: rangt (used here)
No—rangt is still an adjective. In Icelandic, after að vera (to be), you typically use an adjective describing the subject: The answer is wrong → Svarið er rangt. It’s not describing how something is done; it’s describing what the answer is like.
Literally, ekki satt? is like not true? / isn’t it true? It functions as a tag question (“…, isn’t it?”).
Satt is the neuter form of the adjective sannur (true) because it’s referring to an implied neuter idea like það (it/that): “Isn’t it true (that…)?”
It’s one very common equivalent, especially in neutral, everyday speech:
- Svarið er rangt, ekki satt? = The answer is wrong, isn’t it?
You may also see or hear other tag-like endings depending on context and dialect, but ekki satt? is widely understood and safe to use.
Because ekki satt? is a tag question added onto the end of the main clause. Icelandic normally separates that tag from the statement with a comma, much like English often does.
Yes. Er svarið rangt? is a straightforward yes/no question: Is the answer wrong?
Svarið er rangt, ekki satt? is a statement + confirmation, closer to: The answer is wrong, right? You’re expecting agreement.
In a normal declarative sentence, Subject – Verb – Complement is standard: Svarið – er – rangt.
If you turn it into a question, Icelandic typically uses verb-first order: Er svarið rangt? (Verb – Subject – Complement).
A practical approximation (not perfect IPA):
- Svarið ≈ SVAH-rith (with a voiceless th like in thing at the end)
- er ≈ ehr
- rangt ≈ rahngt (with a clear t sound; the ng is like in song)
- ekki ≈ EH-kih
- satt ≈ saht (short a, and a strong tt)
Also, Icelandic stress is usually on the first syllable: SVA-rið, RANGT, E-kki, SATT.
Here, svarið is the subject, so it’s in the nominative. In this particular sentence, you don’t see case changes because að vera doesn’t take an object, and the adjective rangt agrees with the nominative subject.
In other sentences, svar can appear in other cases, but this structure keeps it simple: [Subject] er [adjective].