Breakdown of Barna må lære å ta vare på seg selv.
Questions & Answers about Barna må lære å ta vare på seg selv.
What does barna mean, and why does it end in -a?
What does må mean here?
Må usually means must, have to, or need to, depending on context.
So Barna må lære ... can be understood as:
- The children must learn ...
- The children have to learn ...
- The children need to learn ...
In many contexts, English need to sounds more natural than must, even though Norwegian still uses må.
Why is there no å after må, but there is å before ta?
Because må is a modal verb. After modal verbs in Norwegian, you normally use the infinitive without å.
So:
But lære å ta vare på ... uses å because lære å + infinitive means learn to do something.
So the structure is:
- må lære = must learn
- lære å ta vare på ... = learn to take care of ...
Can lære mean both learn and teach in Norwegian?
Yes. That is something that often surprises English speakers.
Lære can mean:
- learn
- teach
The meaning depends on the structure.
In this sentence:
- Barna må lære å ta vare på seg selv
- The children must learn to take care of themselves
Here it clearly means learn, because of lære å + verb.
Compare:
- Barna lærer norsk = The children learn Norwegian
- Læreren lærer barna norsk = The teacher teaches the children Norwegian
What does ta vare på mean?
Ta vare på is a fixed expression meaning:
- take care of
- look after
- look after well
- sometimes protect or care for
So ta vare på seg selv means take care of oneself / themselves.
You should learn ta vare på as one unit, because the meaning is idiomatic. It is not something you usually translate word by word.
Why does the sentence use seg selv instead of dem selv?
Because seg is the reflexive pronoun. It is used when the object refers back to the subject.
Here, the subject is barna and they are taking care of themselves, not some other people. So Norwegian uses seg:
- Barna må ta vare på seg selv = The children must take care of themselves
If you used dem, it would normally mean them as a separate group, not the same people as the subject.
So:
- seg selv = themselves, referring back to the subject
- dem selv would sound wrong here in standard Norwegian
Why is it seg selv and not just seg?
Seg alone is possible in many contexts, but selv adds emphasis.
So:
- ta vare på seg = take care of oneself / themselves
- ta vare på seg selv = take care of oneself / themselves, with extra emphasis on self
In this sentence, seg selv sounds very natural because the idea is that the children should become able to manage and care for themselves.
Does seg change for singular and plural?
How does the word order work in this sentence?
The sentence is built like this:
- Barna = subject
- må = finite verb
- lære = infinitive
- å ta vare på seg selv = infinitive phrase
So literally:
- Barna | må | lære | å ta vare på seg selv
A useful point is that the finite verb is må, and it comes in the normal second position of a Norwegian main clause.
Would Barn må lære å ta vare på seg selv also be possible?
Yes.
There is a small difference:
- Barna må lære å ta vare på seg selv = the children must learn to take care of themselves
- Barn må lære å ta vare på seg selv = children must learn to take care of themselves
So:
- barna sounds like specific children, or children already known from the context
- barn sounds more general, like a statement about children in general
Does ta vare på seg selv only mean physical self-care?
No. It can be broader than that.
It can include:
- staying safe
- managing on one’s own
- being responsible
- looking after one’s health
- handling everyday life
So in this sentence, it often suggests something like becoming independent enough to look after themselves, not just washing, eating, or dressing.
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