Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Swedish grammar and vocabulary.
Questions & Answers about Kan jag få ett?
What does each word do in this sentence?
- Kan: present tense of kunna (a modal verb meaning “can”).
- jag: subject pronoun “I”.
- få: infinitive “to get/receive/be given” (main verb).
- ett: neuter indefinite pronoun meaning “one (of them)” that stands for a neuter noun understood from context.
Why is it få and not att få?
After modal verbs like kan, vill, ska, måste, Swedish uses the bare infinitive without att. Hence kan få, not kan att få.
Could I say Får jag ett? instead? What’s the nuance?
Yes. Both are common and polite:
- Kan jag få …? = “Can I get/be given …?” (very standard for ordering/requesting).
- Får jag …? = “May I …?” (focuses on permission; can feel a bit more direct or formal depending on tone). Softest option: Skulle jag kunna få …? (“Could I possibly get …?”).
When do I use en vs ett here?
They must match the grammatical gender of the implied noun:
- en for common-gender nouns: en kaka → Kan jag få en?
- ett for neuter nouns: ett äpple → Kan jag få ett? You only use ett if the thing you mean is a neuter noun.
How do I know whether a noun is en or ett?
You have to learn it with the noun. Roughly 75–80% of nouns are en. Dictionaries mark nouns as en or ett; memorize that with each new word.
What if I don’t know the gender but I’m pointing at the item?
Use a pointing expression or a demonstrative:
- Kan jag få en sån (där)? / Kan jag få en sådan?
- Kan jag få den där? (if you treat it as definite “that one”) or Kan jag få det där? for neuter. Or just say the full noun phrase: Kan jag få [noun]?
Is it okay to drop the noun like this in Swedish?
Yes, very common when context makes the noun clear. En and ett can stand alone as “one (of them)” if everyone knows what “them” refers to.
Can I drop the subject jag?
No. Swedish doesn’t drop subject pronouns in finite clauses. You need jag here.
Is the word order fixed in questions like this?
Yes. In yes–no questions, the finite verb comes first (V1):
- Kan (finite verb) + jag (subject) + få (main verb) + object. A colloquial rising-intonation version like Jag kan få ett? occurs in speech, but the standard question is inversion: Kan jag …?
How do I negate this?
Place inte after the subject (and after the finite verb in main clauses):
- Kan jag inte få ett?
- Får jag inte ett? With a modal, inte comes before the main verb: Kan jag inte få …
What’s the difference between få and ha here?
Use få for requesting/being given something. Kan jag ha ett? usually means “Is it possible for me to have/keep/wear one?” and is not the normal way to ask for an item in the moment.
Is ett here the number “one,” the article, or a pronoun?
It’s functioning as a pronoun (“one [of them]”). The same form ett is also the neuter indefinite article before a noun (ett äpple) and the numeral “one” in neuter contexts, but here it stands alone.
How is this pronounced naturally?
- Kan: short a; like “kan.”
- jag: commonly “ya” or “yah” in everyday speech; the g is often very soft or silent.
- få: long å (like a long “o” in “more,” rounded).
- ett: crisp final -tt. Primary stress usually lands on få.
Is this polite enough for ordering?
Yes. Very natural in cafés/shops:
- Kan jag få ett glas vatten?
- Kan jag få ett kvitto? Even shorter is fine: Ett, tack. (when context makes the noun clear). For extra politeness: Skulle jag kunna få … or Jag skulle vilja ha …