Bedeutung
Describing wet weather
Kultureller Hintergrund
In Bergen, it rains about 240 days a year. People there don't say 'Det regner ute' with sadness; it's just a fact of life. They even have umbrella vending machines! Rain is the perfect excuse for 'Innekos'. When it rains, Norwegians love to light candles and stay inside with a blanket. The Sami people have over 100 words for snow, but also many specific terms for rain depending on how it affects the reindeer grazing. On Norwegian Instagram, 'Det regner ute' is often paired with the hashtag #høstkos or #regnvær to show off a cozy indoor aesthetic.
The 'Is' Trap
Never say 'Det er regner'. This is the #1 mistake for English speakers. Just 'Det regner' is enough!
Small Talk Gold
If you don't know what to say to a Norwegian, just say 'Det regner ute'. They will always have an opinion on it.
Bedeutung
Describing wet weather
The 'Is' Trap
Never say 'Det er regner'. This is the #1 mistake for English speakers. Just 'Det regner' is enough!
Small Talk Gold
If you don't know what to say to a Norwegian, just say 'Det regner ute'. They will always have an opinion on it.
Ut vs Ute
Remember: 'Ut' is a door you walk through. 'Ute' is the world outside that door.
Intensity
Add 'mye' (much) if it's raining hard: 'Det regner mye ute'.
Teste dich selbst
Fill in the missing verb in the present tense.
Det ______ ute nå.
We use the present tense ending in '-r' for current actions.
Which sentence is grammatically correct?
Choose the correct word order:
The V2 rule: the verb 'regner' must be the second part of the sentence.
Match the Norwegian phrase with its English intensity.
Match the rain types:
Yrer is light, pøser is heavy, regner is standard.
Complete the dialogue.
A: Skal vi gå en tur? B: Nei, se ut! ______.
The context 'se ut' (look out) and the refusal 'Nei' suggest bad weather.
🎉 Ergebnis: /4
Visuelle Lernhilfen
Ut vs Ute
Aufgabensammlung
4 AufgabenDet ______ ute nå.
We use the present tense ending in '-r' for current actions.
Choose the correct word order:
The V2 rule: the verb 'regner' must be the second part of the sentence.
Ordne jedem Element links seinen Partner rechts zu:
Yrer is light, pøser is heavy, regner is standard.
A: Skal vi gå en tur? B: Nei, se ut! ______.
The context 'se ut' (look out) and the refusal 'Nei' suggest bad weather.
🎉 Ergebnis: /4
Häufig gestellte Fragen
14 FragenIn Norwegian, every sentence needs a subject. Since 'rain' doesn't have a person doing it, we use 'det' as a dummy subject.
Yes, 'Det regner' is perfectly fine. Adding 'ute' just emphasizes that it's happening outside.
'Regner' is Bokmål (most common). 'Regnar' is Nynorsk.
You say 'Det begynner å regne'.
No, it's neutral. You can use it in any situation.
The opposite would be 'Sola skinner' (The sun is shining).
In most dialects, the 'g' is silent. It sounds like 'reiner'.
No, for snow you say 'Det snør ute'.
Adverbs of place usually come after the verb in simple sentences.
Extremely! It's probably the most used phrase in the city.
Yes, because you are 'inne' (inside) the car and the rain is 'ute' (outside).
Then you should say 'Det yrer ute'.
Yes! 'Å regne' can mean both 'to rain' and 'to calculate/do math'. Context tells you which is which.
Use the past tense: 'Det regnet'.
Verwandte Redewendungen
Det pøser ned
specialized formIt's pouring down
Det yrer
specialized formIt's drizzling
Regnvær
similarRainy weather
Gråvær
similarGrey weather
Det snør ute
contrastIt's snowing outside