Questions & Answers about Vi varmer suppe på kjøkkenet.
What is the infinitive of varmer, and how is it conjugated here?
Varmer is the present tense of the verb å varme (“to warm/heat”). In Norwegian, the present is formed by adding -r to the infinitive stem:
• jeg varmer
• du varmer
• han/hun varmer
• vi varmer
…etc.
Why is there no article before suppe? Shouldn’t it be en suppe?
In this sentence suppe is used as a mass (uncountable) noun—like “soup” in English—so you omit the indefinite article. If you mean a specific, countable bowl of soup, you could say en suppe:
• Vi varmer suppe. (We heat soup in general.)
• Vi varmer en suppe. (We heat one (a specific) bowl of soup.)
Can I say varmer opp suppe instead? What does opp add?
Why is på used with kjøkkenet instead of i?
Why does kjøkkenet have an -et ending?
The suffix -et marks the definite neuter singular form. You use it when referring to a specific kitchen (the one the speaker and listener both know):
• et kjøkken (a kitchen) → kjøkkenet (the kitchen)
Why is the phrase på kjøkkenet placed after suppe?
How would I turn this into a yes/no question: “Are we heating soup in the kitchen?”
Invert the verb and the subject:
Varmer vi suppe på kjøkkenet?
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