Breakdown of Ég þakka henni fyrir skilninginn þegar ég þarf að breyta áætluninni á síðustu stundu.
Questions & Answers about Ég þakka henni fyrir skilninginn þegar ég þarf að breyta áætluninni á síðustu stundu.
Why is it henni and not hún?
Because þakka takes a dative object in Icelandic.
- hún = she in the nominative
- henni = her in the dative
So Ég þakka henni means I thank her. This is something you simply have to learn with the verb: að þakka einhverjum = to thank someone.
Why is skilninginn in this form?
Because fyrir here takes the accusative, and skilninginn is the accusative singular definite form of skilningur.
Breakdown:
- skilningur = understanding
- skilninginn = the understanding
So:
- fyrir skilning = for understanding
- fyrir skilninginn = for the understanding
In English we often just say for understanding, but Icelandic often uses the definite form in polite expressions like this.
Why is it að breyta áætluninni and not að breyta áætlunina?
Because breyta takes the dative when it means change something.
So:
- að breyta einhverju = to change something
That gives:
- áætlunin = the plan
- áætluninni = the plan, in the dative
This is a very common thing learners need to memorize: some Icelandic verbs require a specific case for their object, and breyta is one of them.
What exactly is the grammar of þarf að breyta?
Þarf is from að þurfa, meaning to need / have to.
The pattern is:
- þurfa að + infinitive
So:
- ég þarf að breyta = I need to change / I have to change
Here:
- þarf = present tense, 1st/3rd person singular form
- að breyta = to change
This is very similar to English need to change.
Why is þarf in the present tense even though the sentence can refer to future situations?
Because Icelandic, like English, often uses the present tense for things that happen generally, repeatedly, or whenever the situation comes up.
So þegar ég þarf að breyta áætluninni á síðustu stundu means something like:
- when I need to change the plan at the last minute
- or whenever I need to change the plan at the last minute
It does not have to mean only right now. It can describe a recurring situation.
What does þegar mean here: when or whenever?
It can feel like either, depending on context.
In this sentence, þegar introduces a time clause:
- þegar ég þarf að breyta áætluninni = when I need to change the plan
Because the main clause is general and present-tense, English may naturally understand it as whenever. So the Icelandic þegar here can cover the idea of:
- when
- whenever, in a general sense
The exact nuance comes from the whole sentence, not from þegar alone.
Why is it á síðustu stundu? What case is that?
Here á takes the dative, and both words show that.
Breakdown:
- stunda is not the form here; the noun is stund
- stundu = dative singular of stund
- síðustu = the matching feminine singular dative form of síðastur
So:
- á síðustu stundu = at the last minute
This is a fixed and very common expression. It is best learned as a whole phrase.
Why does á take the dative here?
The preposition á can take either accusative or dative, depending on meaning.
A useful basic rule is:
- accusative: movement toward / onto something
- dative: location, position, or a set expression
In á síðustu stundu, there is no movement. It is a time expression meaning at the last minute, so the phrase uses the dative.
This same preposition behavior happens in many places in Icelandic, so it is worth getting used to.
Why does Icelandic use the definite form in skilninginn and áætluninni?
Icelandic uses the definite article as a suffix attached to the noun.
So:
- skilningur = understanding
- skilningurinn = the understanding
- áætlun = plan
- áætlunin = the plan
But because of case changes, in the sentence you get:
- skilninginn = accusative singular definite
- áætluninni = dative singular definite
In polite or specific contexts, Icelandic often sounds natural with the definite form where English may or may not use the.
Could the word order be changed?
Yes. Icelandic word order is somewhat flexible, although not completely free.
The sentence as given is natural:
- Ég þakka henni fyrir skilninginn þegar ég þarf að breyta áætluninni á síðustu stundu.
You could also move the time clause to the front:
- Þegar ég þarf að breyta áætluninni á síðustu stundu, þakka ég henni fyrir skilninginn.
Notice that when the subordinate clause comes first, the finite verb in the main clause comes before the subject:
- þakka ég
- not ég þakka
That is part of Icelandic's verb-second pattern.
Is fyrir skilninginn just a fixed polite phrase?
Yes, very much so.
Þakka einhverjum fyrir skilninginn is a common and natural way to say that you appreciate someone's understanding, patience, or flexibility.
It works a lot like polite English phrases such as:
- I thank her for her understanding
- I appreciate her understanding
So while the grammar is fully regular, the whole expression is also something you should learn as a useful chunk.
Is this sentence talking about one specific woman?
Grammatically, henni tells you only that the person is:
- singular
- female
- in the dative
So yes, it refers to one woman / one female person. But the sentence itself does not tell you who she is. That would come from context.
If it were a man, you would use honum instead:
- Ég þakka honum... = I thank him...
What should I memorize from this sentence as a learner?
A very useful set of things:
- að þakka einhverjum = to thank someone
- fyrir + accusative = for
- að breyta einhverju = to change something
- þurfa að + infinitive = need to do something
- á síðustu stundu = at the last minute
If you remember those chunks, the whole sentence becomes much easier to build and understand.
Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor
Start learning IcelandicMaster Icelandic — from Ég þakka henni fyrir skilninginn þegar ég þarf að breyta áætluninni á síðustu stundu to fluency
All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods.
- ✓ Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
- ✓ Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
- ✓ Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
- ✓ AI tutor to answer your grammar questions