Breakdown of Vi måste skynda oss för att vara i tid.
Questions & Answers about Vi måste skynda oss för att vara i tid.
Vi is the subject (we). The verb in this sentence is måste (must/have to), so you don’t need är (are) or det är (it is).
Structure: Vi (subject) + måste (modal verb) + skynda oss (main verb + object/reflexive pronoun).
Måste is the present tense of måsta and means must / have to / need to. It’s a modal verb, so it’s followed by an infinitive (base form) verb without att:
- Vi måste skynda oss. = We must hurry.
Not: Vi måste att skynda oss.
After a modal verb like måste, Swedish uses the infinitive form: skynda (to hurry) rather than the present tense skyndar (hurry/hurries).
Compare:
- Vi skyndar. = We hurry. (present tense)
- Vi måste skynda. = We must hurry. (modal + infinitive)
Oss is the object pronoun meaning us, and with skynda it’s often used reflexively: skynda oss = hurry up / hurry ourselves. In natural English you usually just say hurry up, but Swedish commonly includes the pronoun:
- Skynda dig! = Hurry up!
- Skynda er! = Hurry up! (to multiple people)
- Vi måste skynda oss. = We have to hurry up.
You can sometimes say Vi måste skynda too, but skynda oss is very common and idiomatic.
För att introduces a purpose clause: in order to. It’s typically followed by an infinitive phrase:
- för att vara i tid = (in order) to be on time
För alone usually means for in other senses (reason, intended recipient, etc.), and it doesn’t reliably signal a purpose + infinitive the way för att does.
In standard Swedish, för att is the fixed combination; you don’t normally drop att there.
Examples:
- Jag studerar för att lära mig. = I study to learn.
- Vi måste skynda oss för att vara i tid.
(Contrast: after modal verbs like måste, you do not use att.)
Literally: vara = to be, i tid = in time/on time.
So vara i tid = to be on time (or in time, depending on context). Swedish uses be here just like English: be on time.
Not exactly.
- i tid = on time / in time (you make it by the deadline)
- i god tid = in good time / with time to spare / well ahead of time
So Vi måste skynda oss för att vara i tid means you’re at risk of being late, while ...för att vara i god tid suggests you want a comfortable margin.
It follows typical Swedish word order:
1) Main clause: Vi (subject) + måste (verb 2nd position) + skynda oss (rest)
2) Purpose phrase: för att + infinitive phrase vara i tid
Since the sentence starts with the subject (Vi), it looks similar to English here.
Yes, and it’s very common. There’s a nuance:
- vara i tid focuses on being on time (the state of not being late).
- komma i tid focuses on arriving on time (the action of getting there).
Both are natural depending on what you want to emphasize.
The reflexive pronoun changes with the subject:
- Jag måste skynda mig för att vara i tid. = I must hurry (up) to be on time.
- Du måste skynda dig ... = You (singular) must hurry ...
- Ni måste skynda er ... = You (plural/formal) must hurry ...
Yes. Common alternatives:
- Vi behöver skynda oss ... = We need to hurry ... (less forceful than måste)
- Vi bör skynda oss ... = We should hurry ... (advice)
- Vi kan skynda oss ... = We can hurry ... (possibility/ability)
The grammar stays the same: modal + infinitive (skynda) and usually still skynda oss.