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🇳🇴A2

A2 Norwegian GrammarObject Pronouns (Accusative & Dative)

Learn Norwegian object pronouns used as direct and indirect objects: meg, deg, ham, henne, den/det, oss, dere, dem. Unlike German, Norwegian does not distinguish between accusative and dative forms. Master pronoun placement in sentences and common verb patterns.

1Object Pronoun Forms

Norwegian object pronouns replace nouns that receive the action of the verb. Unlike English, the same form is used for both direct objects (what is affected) and indirect objects (who receives). The pronouns change form from subject pronouns: jeg→meg, du→deg, han→ham, etc.

Subject vs Object Pronouns

PersonSubjectObjectExample
1st sing.jegmegHan ser meg.
2nd sing.dudegJeg hjelper deg.
3rd sing. m.hanham/hanVi kjenner ham.
3rd sing. f.hunhenneDe liker henne.
3rd sing. n.det/dendet/denJeg tar det.
1st plur.viossHun hjelper oss.
2nd plur.deredereJeg ser dere.
3rd plur.dedemVi kjenner dem.

Examples

Kan du hjelpe meg?

Can you help me?

meg = me (direct object)

Jeg elsker deg.

I love you.

deg = you (direct object)

Vi så ham i går.

We saw him yesterday.

ham = him (also 'han' in speech)

Barna liker henne.

The children like her.

henne = her (direct object)

2Direct and Indirect Objects

A direct object receives the action directly (I see HIM), while an indirect object is the recipient (I give HIM the book). In Norwegian, the indirect object usually comes before the direct object. Both use the same pronoun forms.

Object Order Pattern

PatternNorwegianEnglish
Direct onlyJeg ser ham.I see him.
Indirect + DirectJeg gir ham boken.I give him the book.
Indirect + DirectHun sendte meg et brev.She sent me a letter.
Both pronounsHun ga den til meg.She gave it to me.

Examples

Mor ga meg en gave.

Mom gave me a present.

meg = indirect object (recipient)

Kan du vise oss veien?

Can you show us the way?

oss = indirect object

Jeg sendte dem en melding.

I sent them a message.

dem = indirect object

Han fortalte henne hemmeligheten.

He told her the secret.

henne = indirect object

3Pronouns with Prepositions

Object pronouns are also used after prepositions. Common prepositions include: til (to), for (for), med (with), fra (from), om (about), and hos (at someone's place). The pronoun always follows the preposition.

Common Preposition + Pronoun

PrepositionExampleTranslation
tiltil megto me
forfor degfor you
medmed hamwith him
frafra hennefrom her
omom ossabout us
hoshos demat their place

Examples

Dette er en gave til deg.

This is a present for you.

til deg = to/for you

Vil du gå med meg?

Do you want to go with me?

med meg = with me

Jeg fikk et brev fra henne.

I got a letter from her.

fra henne = from her

Vi spiste middag hos dem.

We ate dinner at their place.

hos dem = at their place

4Word Order with Object Pronouns

In main clauses, object pronouns come after the verb. In subordinate clauses, they come after the subject (and any adverbs). When there are two pronouns, the indirect object typically comes first or 'til' is used to clarify.

Pronoun Position

Clause TypePatternExample
Main clauseVerb + ObjectJeg ser henne.
SubordinateSubj + Object + Verb...at jeg ser henne
Two objectsIO + DOHan ga meg den.
With tilDO + til + IOHan ga den til meg.

Examples

Jeg kjenner ham godt.

I know him well.

Main clause: verb + pronoun

Hun sa at hun kjenner dem.

She said that she knows them.

Subordinate: subject + pronoun + verb

Gi meg den!

Give me it! / Give it to me!

Indirect before direct object

Kan du gi den til ham?

Can you give it to him?

til clarifies recipient