Breakdown of Det er jeg som vasker skittentøyet i kveld.
jeg
I
være
to be
i
in
det
it
kvelden
the evening
vaske
to wash
som
who
skittentøyet
the dirty laundry
Questions & Answers about Det er jeg som vasker skittentøyet i kveld.
What does the structure Det er … som do here?
It’s a cleft sentence used for emphasis. Det er jeg som vasker skittentøyet i kveld highlights the subject — “It’s me (not someone else) who is doing it tonight.” The neutral, non‑emphatic version would be simply: Jeg vasker skittentøyet i kveld.
Why is it jeg and not meg after Det er?
In standard written Norwegian, when the pronoun is the subject of the following som‑clause, you use the nominative: Det er jeg som vasker … Many people say Det er meg som … in everyday speech, and Det er meg is fine when the pronoun stands alone (e.g., answering the door: “It’s me”). For careful writing or exams, prefer Det er jeg som …
What does som mean here, and can I omit it?
Som is a relative word meaning “who/that,” introducing the clause that describes the focused element. Because it refers to the subject, you cannot omit it here.
- Correct: Det er jeg som vasker …
- Incorrect: Det er jeg vasker …
When the focused element is not the subject (e.g., the object), som is often used and sometimes can be omitted: Det er skittentøyet (som) jeg vasker i kveld.
Why is the word order jeg som vasker and not som vasker jeg?
Inside a som‑clause (a relative/subordinate clause), Norwegian does not use the main‑clause V2 word order. The subject comes before the verb: jeg vasker, not vasker jeg. So: … som jeg vasker or, when the subject is the focused element as here, … som vasker with the subject already specified by the cleft’s first part (jeg).
Why is vasker in the present tense if the action is tonight (i kveld)?
Can I say Det er jeg som skal vaske skittentøyet i kveld? Is there a nuance difference?
What exactly is skittentøyet, and why the definite ending -et?
Skittentøy is a neuter noun meaning “dirty laundry.” Adding -et makes it definite: skittentøyet = “the dirty laundry,” referring to a particular pile/batch. Using the indefinite (skittentøy) would be more general (“dirty laundry” as a type or some amount). Here, skittentøyet implies a specific load everyone knows about.
Could I use other words instead of skittentøyet?
Yes, depending on nuance:
- klærne = “the clothes” (more concrete items): Jeg vasker klærne i kveld.
- klesvasken = “the laundry (task/load): Jeg tar klesvasken i kveld (idiomatic: “I’ll do the laundry tonight”).
Avoid Jeg vasker klesvasken; use tar/gjør klesvasken instead.
What does i kveld mean exactly? Is it one word or two? How is it different from i natt or i ettermiddag?
- i kveld = “this evening/tonight (evening hours).” It is always written as two words.
- i natt = “tonight (during the night)” or “at night.”
- i ettermiddag = “this afternoon.”
- i aften exists but is more formal/old‑fashioned.
Note: på kvelden means “in the evenings” (habitually), not “this evening.”
Can I flip the emphasis and say Det er i kveld jeg vasker skittentøyet?
How do I negate this, and where does ikke go?
Two common options, with different meanings:
- Det er ikke jeg som vasker skittentøyet i kveld. = “It’s not me who’s washing it tonight.” (Negation in the main clause; someone else will.)
- Det er jeg som ikke vasker skittentøyet i kveld. = “I’m the one who isn’t washing it tonight.” (Negation inside the som‑clause; you specifically are not doing it.)
Inside a som‑clause, ikke comes after the subject and before the verb: … som jeg ikke vasker …
Any pronunciation tips, especially for skittentøyet?
- skittentøyet: roughly [SHIT‑ten‑toy‑eh].
- øy is a diphthong like English “oy” but with rounded lips (Norwegian [œy]).
- The final -et is pronounced as a light -e in many accents.
- kveld: the kv is like “kv” in “kvetch,” and the ld often sounds like a dark “l” + soft “d” or just a dark “l,” depending on dialect.
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