Breakdown of Jeg åpner vinduet siden det er varmt.
Questions & Answers about Jeg åpner vinduet siden det er varmt.
What does siden mean here, and how does it function compared to fordi?
Why is there a det in the clause “siden det er varmt”? Can it be omitted?
Why does the verb in the subordinate clause after siden come after the subject, unlike the V2 rule in the main clause?
Why is vinduet in the definite form? Would et vindu ever work?
Does Norwegian have a continuous tense like English “I am opening”?
No separate continuous tense exists in Norwegian. The simple present (åpner) covers both habitual actions and actions happening right now. If you want to emphasize that you’re in the middle of opening, you can say:
• Jeg holder på å åpne vinduet. (I’m in the process of opening the window.)
• Jeg er i ferd med å åpne vinduet. (I’m about to/opening right now.)
Could I have used ettersom instead of siden?
Yes. ettersom also means “because/since” and introduces a subordinate clause with S–V order:
Jeg åpner vinduet ettersom det er varmt.
It’s a bit more formal or literary than siden, but the meaning is the same.
Is there any difference in meaning or register between using siden, fordi, and ettersom?
• fordi: neutral, most common for giving reasons.
• siden: slightly more formal or implies the reason is already known/obvious.
• ettersom: more formal or written style, similar nuance to siden.
All three introduce subordinate clauses with subject–verb order, but your choice affects tone and register.
Why isn’t the verb åpne (infinitive) used instead of åpner?
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