Hún finnur kjól sem hún getur hneppt sjálf, en rennilásinn á gamla kjólnum er of stífur.

Breakdown of Hún finnur kjól sem hún getur hneppt sjálf, en rennilásinn á gamla kjólnum er of stífur.

vera
to be
hún
she
geta
to be able
á
on
gamall
old
en
but
finna
to find
of
too
sem
that
stífur
stiff
kjóllinn
the dress
hneppa
to button
rennilásinn
the zipper
sjálf
herself

Questions & Answers about Hún finnur kjól sem hún getur hneppt sjálf, en rennilásinn á gamla kjólnum er of stífur.

Why is it kjól and not the dictionary form kjóll?

Because kjól is the accusative singular of kjóll.

  • kjóll = nominative singular, the basic dictionary form
  • kjól = accusative singular

In this sentence, kjól is the direct object of finnur (finds), so accusative is used:

  • Hún finnur kjól = She finds a dress
What does sem mean here?

Sem introduces a relative clause. Here it means that, which, or sometimes just nothing in natural English.

  • kjól sem hún getur hneppt sjálf
  • literally: a dress that she can button herself

A useful point: sem does not change for gender, number, or case.

Why is the word order sem hún getur... instead of putting the verb earlier?

Because sem starts a subordinate/relative clause, and Icelandic word order is different there from main-clause word order.

In a main clause, Icelandic often uses verb-second order:

  • Hún finnur kjól.

But after sem, the subject usually comes before the finite verb:

  • sem hún getur hneppt sjálf

So this order is normal for a relative clause.

Why is it getur hneppt and not getur hneppa?

After geta (can / be able to), Icelandic commonly uses the form called sagnbót. For hneppa, that form is hneppt.

So:

  • geta hneppt = can button / can fasten

This is just the normal pattern to learn with geta:

  • geta gert = can do
  • geta séð = can see
  • geta hneppt = can button/fasten
What exactly does hneppa mean?

Hneppa means to fasten, especially to button up clothing. It can also be used more generally for fastening something with a clasp, snap, or similar closure.

So in this sentence, it suggests a dress that she can fasten by herself, probably with buttons or a similar front fastening.

Why is it sjálf?

Sjálf means herself here, and it agrees with hún.

Since hún refers to a feminine singular person, the matching form is:

  • sjálf = feminine singular

So:

  • hún getur hneppt sjálf = she can button it herself

Compare:

  • hann ... sjálfur = he ... himself
  • það ... sjálft = it ... itself
Why is it rennilásinn with -inn on the end?

The ending -inn is the suffixed definite article, so rennilásinn means the zipper.

  • rennilás = a zipper
  • rennilásinn = the zipper

It is definite because the sentence is talking about a specific zipper: the zipper on the old dress.

Why is it á gamla kjólnum?

Because the preposition á can take different cases depending on meaning.

Here it means on in a location sense, so it takes the dative:

  • á gamla kjólnum = on the old dress

Forms here:

  • kjóllkjólnum = dative singular definite
  • gamallgamla = matching adjective form

A useful contrast:

  • á kjólnum = on the dress (location, dative)
  • á kjólinn = onto the dress (movement, accusative)
Why is one dress indefinite (kjól) but the other one definite (gamla kjólnum)?

Because they refer to different kinds of reference.

  • kjól = a dress, not yet identified, just some dress she finds
  • gamla kjólnum = the old dress, a specific known dress

So Icelandic is making the same distinction English makes between:

  • a dress
  • the old dress
Why is it stífur?

Stífur agrees with rennilásinn, which is masculine singular nominative.

Even though stífur comes after er, it still agrees with the subject:

  • rennilásinn = masculine singular
  • therefore stífur = masculine singular

Also, of here means too, not English of:

  • of stífur = too stiff
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