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B1 Norwegian GrammarDouble Infinitive Construction

Master Norwegian double infinitive constructions used in perfect tenses with modal verbs. Learn when to use the infinitive form instead of the past participle, and understand verb chain patterns for expressing past abilities and obligations.

1Perfect Tense with Modal Verbs

In Norwegian, when modal verbs (kunne, ville, skulle, måtte, burde) are used in the perfect tense with another verb, the modal keeps its infinitive form instead of becoming a past participle. This creates a double infinitive: 'har kunnet gjøre' (have been able to do).

Modal Verbs in Perfect

ModalPerfect FormExample
kunne (can)har kunnethar kunnet gjøre
ville (will)har villethar villet reise
skulle (shall)har skullethar skullet arbeide
måtte (must)har måttethar måttet vente

Examples

Jeg har ikke kunnet komme.

I have not been able to come.

kunnet stays as infinitive

Han har villet hjelpe oss.

He has wanted to help us.

villet + hjelpe

Vi har skullet arbeide hele dagen.

We have had to work all day.

skullet in perfect

De har måttet vente i timevis.

They have had to wait for hours.

måttet keeps infinitive form

2Word Order with Double Infinitive

In main clauses, 'har/hadde' takes second position (V2), with the double infinitive at the end. In subordinate clauses, the word order changes: subject first, then adverbs/negation, then 'har', then the double infinitive. Adverbs like 'ikke' go before the verb group.

Word Order Patterns

Clause TypePatternExample
MainS + har + ... + modal + infJeg har kunnet svømme
NegationS + har + ikke + modal + infJeg har ikke kunnet svømme
Subordinateat S + ikke + har + modal + infat jeg ikke har kunnet
QuestionHar + S + modal + inf?Har du kunnet gjøre det?

Examples

Jeg har alltid villet lære norsk.

I have always wanted to learn Norwegian.

adverb before double infinitive

Hun sier at hun har skullet gå.

She says that she has had to leave.

subordinate clause

Har du kunnet finne veien?

Have you been able to find the way?

question form

Jeg vet at han ikke har villet komme.

I know that he has not wanted to come.

negation in subordinate

3Past Perfect with Modals

The past perfect (pluperfect) uses 'hadde' instead of 'har'. The same double infinitive rule applies: 'hadde kunnet gjøre'. Use this for abilities or necessities that existed before another past event, often in conditional sentences.

Pluperfect Modal Forms

ModalPluperfectMeaning
kunnehadde kunnethad been able to
villehadde villethad wanted to
skullehadde skullethad been supposed to
burdehadde burdetshould have

Examples

Jeg hadde kunnet hjelpe hvis du hadde spurt.

I could have helped if you had asked.

conditional meaning

Hun hadde villet bli, men hun måtte gå.

She had wanted to stay, but she had to leave.

past wish vs necessity

Vi hadde skullet være der klokka ti.

We had been supposed to be there at ten.

past obligation

De hadde aldri kunnet forestille seg det.

They had never been able to imagine it.

aldri + pluperfect

4Common Expressions and Usage

Double infinitive constructions appear frequently in Norwegian, especially for expressing past abilities, unfulfilled wishes, or obligations. They are common in storytelling and when explaining what should or could have happened. Listen for these patterns in spoken Norwegian.

Common Double Infinitive Phrases

NorwegianEnglishContext
har kunnet sehave been able to seepast ability
har villet hahave wanted to havepast desire
har skullet gjørehave had to dopast necessity
har burdet sishould have saidpast advice

Examples

Jeg har aldri kunnet like kaffe.

I have never been able to like coffee.

lifelong inability

Han har hele tiden villet fortelle deg det.

He has wanted to tell you all along.

ongoing past desire

Vi har dessverre ikke kunnet finne løsningen.

Unfortunately, we have not been able to find the solution.

polite negative

Du har burdet ringe til henne.

You should have called her.

giving past advice