Icelandic retains many grammatical features of other ancient
Germanic languages, and resembles
Old Norwegian before much of its
fusional inflection was lost. Modern Icelandic is still a heavily
inflected language with four
cases:
nominative,
accusative,
dative and
genitive. Icelandic nouns can have one of three
grammatical genders: masculine, feminine or neuter. There are two main declension paradigms for each gender:
strong and
weak nouns, and these are further divided into subclasses of nouns, based primarily on the
genitive singular and
nominative plural endings of a particular noun. For example, within the strong masculine nouns, there is a subclass (class 1) that declines with
-s (''
) in the genitive singular and -ar
() in the nominative plural. However, there is another subclass (class 3) of strong masculine nouns that always declines with -ar
() in the genitive singular and -ir
('') in the nominative plural. Additionally, Icelandic permits a
quirky subject, that is, certain verbs have subjects in an oblique case (i.e. other than the nominative). Nouns, adjectives and pronouns are declined in the four cases and for number in the singular and plural.
Verbs are
conjugated for
tense,
mood,
person,
number and
voice. There are three voices: active, passive and middle (or medial), but it may be debated whether the middle voice is a voice or simply an independent class of verbs of its own, as every middle-voice verb has an active-voice ancestor, but sometimes with drastically different meaning, and the middle-voice verbs form a conjugation group of their own. Examples are '
("come") vs. ' ("get there"), '
("kill") vs. ' ("perish ignominiously") and '
("take") vs. ' ("manage to"). Verbs have up to ten tenses, but Icelandic, like English, forms most of them with
auxiliary verbs. There are three or four main groups of weak verbs in Icelandic, depending on whether one takes a historical or a formalistic view: '
, ', and '''', referring to the endings that these verbs take when conjugated in the first person
singular present. Almost all Icelandic verbs have the ending -a in the infinitive, some with '
, two with ' ('
, '), one with '
(': "wash") and one with ''''. Many transitive verbs (i.e. they require an
object), can take a
reflexive pronoun instead. The case of the pronoun depends on the case that the verb governs. As for further classification of verbs, Icelandic behaves much like other Germanic languages, with a main division between weak verbs and strong, and the strong verbs, of which there are about 150 to 200, are divided into six classes plus reduplicative verbs. The basic word order in Icelandic is
subject–verb–object. However, as words are heavily inflected, the word order is fairly flexible, and every combination may occur in poetry; SVO, SOV, VSO, VOS, OSV and OVS are all allowed for metrical purposes. However, as with most Germanic languages, Icelandic usually complies with the
V2 word order restriction, so the conjugated verb in Icelandic usually appears as the second element in the clause, preceded by the word or phrase being emphasised. For example: • ''
(I'' know it not.) • ''
(Not'' know I it.) • ''
(It'' know I not.) • '''' (I went to Britain when I was one year old.) • '''' (To Britain went I, when I was one year old.) • '''' (When I was one year old, went I to Britain.) In the above examples, the conjugated verbs '
and ' are always the
second element in their respective clauses. A distinction between formal and informal address (
T–V distinction) had existed in Icelandic from the 17th century, but use of the formal variant weakened in the 1950s and rapidly disappeared. It no longer exists in regular speech, but may occasionally be found in pre-written speeches addressed to the
bishop and members of
parliament. == Vocabulary ==