Questions & Answers about Peysan mín er rauð.
Why is it peysan and not just peysa?
Because Icelandic usually puts the definite article on the end of the noun.
- peysa = sweater
- peysan = the sweater
In this kind of phrase, Icelandic normally says peysan mín for my sweater, not just peysa mín in the most neutral everyday style.
Why is mín after the noun?
That is a very common Icelandic pattern with possessives.
English says:
- my sweater
Icelandic very often says, more literally:
- the sweater my = peysan mín
So the possessive pronoun often comes after the noun, especially in ordinary neutral speech.
Why is it mín and not minn or mitt?
Because mín has to agree with peyson? Wait no—agree with peysan, which is a feminine singular noun in the nominative.
The basic nominative singular forms are:
- minn = masculine
- mín = feminine
- mitt = neuter
Since peysa is feminine, you use mín.
How do I know that peysa is feminine?
You usually learn a noun’s gender along with the word itself. In a dictionary, it would be marked as feminine.
A helpful clue is that many Icelandic nouns ending in -a are feminine, and peysa is one of them. Once you know it is feminine, that affects the forms around it, such as:
- mín instead of minn/mitt
- rauð instead of masculine or neuter adjective forms
Why is the adjective rauð?
Because adjectives in Icelandic agree with the noun they describe in gender, number, and case.
Here, peysan mín is:
- feminine
- singular
- nominative
So the adjective must match that, giving rauð.
Compare:
- rauður = masculine
- rauð = feminine
- rautt = neuter
Why is it rauð and not rauða?
Because this adjective is being used predicatively—that is, after the verb to be.
In Peysan mín er rauð, the structure is:
- The sweater is red
After er (is), Icelandic uses the adjective in the predicative form: rauð.
But when the adjective comes directly before a definite noun, you often get a different form:
- rauða peysan = the red sweater
So:
- Peysan mín er rauð = predicative adjective
- rauða peysan mín = adjective directly modifying the noun
What does er mean here?
Er is the 3rd person singular present form of the verb vera (to be).
So:
- ég er = I am
- þú ert = you are
- hann/hún/það er = he/she/it is
Since peysan mín is singular, the sentence uses er.
What case is peysan mín in?
It is in the nominative case because it is the subject of the sentence.
That is why the other words match it:
- peysan = nominative singular definite form
- mín = feminine singular nominative
- rauð = feminine singular nominative
So the whole sentence is built around a feminine singular nominative subject.
Can I say mín peysa er rauð instead?
You may hear that kind of order, but peysan mín er rauð is the more neutral, everyday way to say my sweater is red.
Putting the possessive before the noun can sound more marked, emphatic, literary, or contrastive depending on context.
So as a learner, the safest normal pattern is:
- peysan mín = my sweater
Why does Icelandic use both the definite article and the possessive here?
Because that is just how this common Icelandic structure works.
English does not say:
- the my sweater
But Icelandic normally does use the definite noun plus the possessive:
- peysan mín
- bíllinn minn = my car
- húsið mitt = my house
So even though it looks strange from an English perspective, it is a standard pattern.
Does mín mean my or mine?
It can do both, depending on how it is used.
In this sentence, mín means my because it goes with a noun:
- peysan mín = my sweater
But it can also mean mine when it stands on its own:
- Peysan er mín = The sweater is mine
So the same Icelandic form can match either my or mine in English, depending on the sentence.
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