Dokumentet må bli godkjent før jeg kan sende det.

Questions & Answers about Dokumentet må bli godkjent før jeg kan sende det.

Why is it dokumentet and not just dokument?

Dokumentet means the document, while dokument means a document or just document in a general sense.

Norwegian usually adds the definite article to the end of the noun:

  • et dokument = a document
  • dokumentet = the document

Because the sentence is talking about a specific document, Norwegian uses dokumentet.


Why does dokumentet end in -et?

That ending shows that dokument is a neuter noun.

In Norwegian, indefinite and definite forms depend on gender:

  • en bilbilen
  • ei bokboka / boken
  • et dokumentdokumentet

So:

  • et = the indefinite article for a neuter noun
  • -et = the definite ending for a neuter noun

That is why you get dokumentet.


What does mean here?

means must or has to.

It is the present tense of the modal verb måtte in the sense of obligation/necessity.

So:

  • Dokumentet må bli godkjent = The document must be approved

Like English modal verbs, is followed directly by an infinitive, without å:

  • må bli
  • not må å bli

Why is it bli godkjent? What kind of structure is that?

Bli godkjent is a very common Norwegian way to express a passive idea.

Literally, bli means become, but in sentences like this it often works like English be in a passive construction:

  • bli godkjent = be approved
  • literally: become approved

This is often called the bli-passive.

So:

  • Dokumentet må bli godkjent = The document must be approved

This structure emphasizes that something needs to happen to the document.


Could you also say Dokumentet må godkjennes?

Yes. Dokumentet må godkjennes is also correct and means essentially the same thing: The document must be approved.

There are two common passive patterns here:

  • må bli godkjent
  • må godkjennes

A useful difference:

  • bli + past participle often sounds a bit more concrete or event-focused
  • -s passive (godkjennes) can sound slightly more formal or written

In everyday use, both are very normal.


Why is it godkjent and not godkjenne?

Because godkjent is the past participle of godkjenne.

  • godkjenne = to approve
  • godkjent = approved

After bli in this kind of passive structure, Norwegian uses the past participle:

  • bli godkjent = be approved

Compare:

  • Jeg må godkjenne dokumentet = I must approve the document
  • Dokumentet må bli godkjent = The document must be approved

Why is there kan in før jeg kan sende det? Why not just før jeg sender det?

Both are possible, but they are not exactly the same.

  • før jeg kan sende det = before I can send it
  • før jeg sender det = before I send it

With kan, the sentence emphasizes ability/permission/possibility: the document has to be approved before sending becomes possible.

Without kan, the sentence is more neutral and simply refers to the action of sending.

So kan adds the idea: approval is a condition that must be met first.


Why is the word order før jeg kan sende det and not før kan jeg sende det?

Because after før here, Norwegian has a subordinate clause. In subordinate clauses, the normal word order is:

subject + verb + ...

So:

  • før jeg kan sende det

not:

  • før kan jeg sende det

The order kan jeg would be normal in a main clause question-like inversion or after certain fronted elements in a main clause, but not here.

Compare:

  • Jeg kan sende det. = main clause
  • før jeg kan sende det = subordinate clause

Why is det used at the end?

Det means it, and it refers back to dokumentet.

So:

  • Dokumentet = the document
  • det = it

Norwegian usually repeats the object as a pronoun just like English does:

  • jeg kan sende dokumentet = I can send the document
  • jeg kan sende det = I can send it

Since the document has already been mentioned, using det is natural.


Why isn’t there å after or kan?

Because Norwegian modal verbs are followed by the infinitive without å.

That includes verbs like:

  • kan
  • skal
  • vil
  • bør

So you say:

  • må bli
  • kan sende

not:

  • må å bli
  • kan å sende

This works similarly to English, where we say must be and can send, not must to be or can to send.


What is the basic verb form of sende, and how is it being used here?

The basic verb is å sende, meaning to send.

In the sentence, it appears after the modal verb kan, so it stays in the infinitive form without å:

  • å sende = to send
  • kan sende = can send

So:

  • jeg kan sende det = I can send it

Is this sentence literal in Norwegian, or does it sound natural?

It sounds completely natural.

Dokumentet må bli godkjent før jeg kan sende det is a very normal Norwegian sentence. It is the kind of thing you might see in an office, school, government, or administrative context.

It has a natural Norwegian structure:

  • specific noun in definite form: dokumentet
  • necessity:
  • passive approval process: bli godkjent
  • condition introduced by før
  • repeated object as pronoun: det

So this is not an awkward translation from English; it is standard, idiomatic Norwegian.


How would this sentence sound if I changed the order and started with før?

You can do that:

  • Før jeg kan sende det, må dokumentet bli godkjent.

This means the same thing.

The main difference is emphasis:

  • Dokumentet må bli godkjent før jeg kan sende det.
    Focuses first on the document needing approval.
  • Før jeg kan sende det, må dokumentet bli godkjent.
    Focuses first on the condition: before I can send it.

Notice that when the subordinate clause comes first, the main clause still keeps normal Norwegian main-clause inversion:

  • må dokumentet bli godkjent

not:

  • dokumentet må bli godkjent

after that fronted clause.

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