Questions & Answers about Bíllinn er enn í góðu lagi.
Why is it bíllinn and not just bíll?
Bíllinn means the car, while bíll means a car.
Icelandic usually adds the definite article to the end of the noun instead of using a separate word like the in English:
- bíll = a car
- bíllinn = the car
So Bíllinn er enn í góðu lagi means The car is still in good condition/order.
What does the ending -inn mean in bíllinn?
The ending -inn is the definite article, equivalent to English the.
For masculine singular nouns like bíll, the nominative singular definite form is often made by adding -inn:
- bíll = car
- bíllinn = the car
This is very common in Icelandic, and learners need to get used to the idea that the is often attached directly to the noun.
Why is the verb er used here?
Er is the present tense of vera, which means to be.
So:
- er = is
In this sentence, Bíllinn er enn í góðu lagi, it connects the subject bíllinn with the state or condition described by í góðu lagi.
What does enn mean here?
Enn here means still.
So the sentence suggests that the car remains in good condition now, perhaps despite time passing or despite there being some reason to wonder whether that would still be true.
Compare:
- Bíllinn er í góðu lagi. = The car is in good condition.
- Bíllinn er enn í góðu lagi. = The car is still in good condition.
Where does enn usually go in a sentence?
Enn often comes after the verb, especially in simple statements like this one:
- Bíllinn er enn í góðu lagi.
That placement is very natural in Icelandic. English learners may expect more flexibility, but this position is the most straightforward one to learn first.
What does í góðu lagi mean literally?
Literally, í góðu lagi means something like in good order or in a good state.
It is a very common Icelandic expression meaning:
- okay
- all right
- in good condition
- acceptable
With a car, í góðu lagi usually means in good condition or working fine.
Is í góðu lagi an idiom?
Yes, very much so. Although the words can be understood separately, the whole phrase works as a set expression.
You will see í lagi and í góðu lagi often:
- Það er í lagi. = That’s okay.
- Allt er í góðu lagi. = Everything is fine.
- Bíllinn er í góðu lagi. = The car is in good condition.
So it is best to learn í góðu lagi as a chunk.
Why is it góðu and not góður or gott?
Because góðu is in the dative form.
The preposition í can take different cases in Icelandic, and in this sentence it expresses a state or location, not motion, so it takes the dative.
The noun in the phrase is lagi, which is also dative here, and the adjective has to agree with it:
- góður = nominative masculine
- gott = nominative/accusative neuter
- góðu = dative form used here
So:
- í góðu lagi = in good order / in good condition
Why is it lagi and not lag?
Because after í in this sentence, the noun is in the dative case.
The basic form is:
- lag = order, arrangement, condition, form
But after í when describing being in a state or position, it becomes dative:
- í lagi
- í góðu lagi
This is a very common pattern in Icelandic: prepositions often control the case of the noun that follows.
How do I know that í takes the dative here?
The preposition í can take either:
- accusative for motion into something
- dative for being in something or in a state
Here, there is no movement. The sentence describes the car’s current condition, so Icelandic uses the dative:
- í góðu lagi
A useful comparison:
- fara í hús = go into the house, motion → accusative
- vera í húsi = be in the house, location → dative
This sentence works like the second type.
What case is bíllinn in?
Bíllinn is in the nominative case because it is the subject of the sentence.
The subject is the thing that is in some condition:
- Bíllinn = the car
- er = is
- enn í góðu lagi = still in good condition
So nominative is exactly what you would expect here.
Could I also say just Bíllinn er í lagi?
Yes. Bíllinn er í lagi is perfectly natural and means The car is okay / The car is fine.
The version with góðu sounds a bit fuller or a bit more explicitly positive:
- í lagi = okay, fine
- í góðu lagi = in good condition, quite all right
With a car, both can work, but í góðu lagi often sounds slightly more like the car is in solid condition.
Does enn ever mean yet instead of still?
Yes, depending on the sentence.
In positive statements like this one, enn usually means still:
- Bíllinn er enn í góðu lagi. = The car is still in good condition.
But in other contexts, especially with negation, Icelandic can express not yet:
- ekki enn = not yet
For example:
- Bíllinn er ekki tilbúinn enn. = The car is not ready yet.
So in this sentence, enn is best understood as still.
How would this sentence be pronounced?
A rough pronunciation guide for English speakers is:
BEE-thlinn er ehtn ee GOH-thu LAH-yi
A few notes:
- í is like ee
- ð in góðu is like the th in this
- g before i in lagi is pronounced more like a y sound
- ll in bíllinn has a special Icelandic pronunciation that English does not really have, so learners often need practice with that word
You do not need perfect pronunciation right away, but it helps to listen to native audio for words like bíllinn.
Is this sentence formal or informal?
It is neutral and very natural. You could use it in normal conversation, and it would not sound strange in writing either.
It is a standard everyday Icelandic sentence:
- not especially formal
- not slangy
- very useful in ordinary speech
What is the basic word order of this sentence?
The basic order is:
Subject + verb + adverb + prepositional phrase
So:
- Bíllinn = subject
- er = verb
- enn = adverb
- í góðu lagi = phrase describing condition
That makes it a very good example sentence for beginners, because the structure is quite straightforward.
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