Ég er enn með kvef, svo ég drekk heitt te.

Breakdown of Ég er enn með kvef, svo ég drekk heitt te.

ég
I
drekka
to drink
heitur
hot
svo
so
vera með
to have
te
the tea
enn
still
kvef
the cold

Questions & Answers about Ég er enn með kvef, svo ég drekk heitt te.

Why does Icelandic say Ég er með kvef instead of using a verb meaning to have?

A very common Icelandic way to talk about temporary conditions, especially illnesses, is vera með + noun.

So Ég er með kvef literally looks like I am with a cold, but idiomatically it means I have a cold. This is a normal everyday pattern, and learners should get used to it rather than translating word-for-word.

What does enn mean here, and why is it placed after er?

Here enn means still.

In a simple Icelandic main clause, short adverbs like enn often come after the finite verb. So:

  • Ég er enn með kvef = I still have a cold

That placement is very natural in Icelandic.

Why is it ég er when the dictionary form is vera?

Because vera is an irregular verb.

The infinitive is vera = to be, but its present-tense forms do not look very similar:

  • ég er = I am
  • þú ert = you are
  • hann/hún/það er = he/she/it is
  • við erum = we are

So er is simply the correct present-tense form for ég here.

What case is kvef in after með?

Here kvef is in the accusative, because með normally takes the accusative in this kind of expression.

However, you do not see a special ending here, because kvef is a neuter noun and its nominative and accusative singular forms are the same: kvef.

So the case is there grammatically, even though the form does not visibly change.

What does svo mean in this sentence?

Here svo means so or therefore.

It connects the two ideas:

  • Ég er enn með kvef
  • ég drekk heitt te

So the logic is: I still have a cold, so I drink hot tea.

Be aware that svo can have other meanings in Icelandic too, depending on context, but here it is the causal so.

Why is the word order svo ég drekk and not something like svo drekk ég?

In this sentence, svo is functioning as a conjunction joining two main clauses. After that kind of svo, normal clause order subject + verb is very natural:

  • svo ég drekk heitt te

So ég stays before drekk.

Learners often compare this with expressions like þess vegna, where you do get inversion:

  • Þess vegna drekk ég heitt te

So the word order difference comes from how the connector is functioning.

Why is it drekk and not drekka or drekkur?

Because drekk is the 1st person singular present-tense form of drekka.

  • drekka = to drink
  • ég drekk = I drink
  • þú drekkur = you drink
  • hann/hún/það drekkur = he/she/it drinks

So drekkur would not match ég.

Why is it heitt te?

Because the adjective has to agree with the noun.

The noun te is neuter singular, so the adjective heitur changes to the neuter singular form heitt.

That gives:

  • heitt te = hot tea

This agreement is one of the most important features of Icelandic grammar: adjectives change form depending on gender, number, case, and whether they are strong or weak.

Why is there no word for a in a cold or hot tea?

Icelandic does not have an indefinite article like English a/an.

So where English says:

  • a cold
  • a tea

Icelandic usually just uses the noun by itself:

  • kvef
  • te

If Icelandic wants to say the, it usually adds the definite article to the end of the noun instead.

Could I say ennþá instead of enn?

Yes. In many contexts, enn and ennþá can both mean still.

So you could also say:

  • Ég er ennþá með kvef

That sounds natural too. In everyday speech, ennþá is very common. Enn is also completely normal and often slightly shorter and neater in style.

Why is there a comma before svo?

Because the sentence contains two full clauses:

  • Ég er enn með kvef
  • ég drekk heitt te

In Icelandic, it is very common to separate such clauses with a comma, especially when they are linked by a conjunction like svo.

So the comma here is standard and natural.

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