A1 Expression Neutro

Har du sett nøklene?

Have you seen the keys?

Significado

Looking for misplaced items

🌍

Contexto cultural

The 'nøkkelbarn' (latchkey kid) phenomenon is a significant part of 20th-century Norwegian social history, representing trust and independence. Keys are often left in 'secret' places at cabins, a practice that relies on high social trust. Digital keys (app-based) are becoming common, but the phrase 'Har du sett nøklene?' is still used even if the 'key' is just a phone. Dialectal differences mean you might hear 'nøklane' or 'nøklan', but the meaning remains identical.

💡

The 'Har'u' Shortcut

In casual conversation, Norwegians often blend 'Har du' into 'Har'u'. Try it to sound more native!

⚠️

Definite vs Indefinite

Always use 'nøklene' (the keys) when searching. 'Nøkler' sounds like you are looking for any keys in the world.

Significado

Looking for misplaced items

💡

The 'Har'u' Shortcut

In casual conversation, Norwegians often blend 'Har du' into 'Har'u'. Try it to sound more native!

⚠️

Definite vs Indefinite

Always use 'nøklene' (the keys) when searching. 'Nøkler' sounds like you are looking for any keys in the world.

🎯

Add 'mine'

Adding 'mine' (my) makes it clearer that they belong to you: 'Har du sett nøklene mine?'

💬

Tone Matters

A rising intonation at the end makes it a friendly question. A flat tone can sound like an accusation.

Teste-se

Fill in the correct form of the verb 'å se'.

Har du ____ nøklene?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: sett

After the auxiliary 'har', we use the past participle 'sett'.

Which sentence is the most natural when looking for your keys?

Choose one:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Har du sett nøklene?

We use the definite plural 'nøklene' because we are looking for specific keys.

Match the Norwegian word to its English meaning.

Match the following:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: a

These are the basic components of the phrase.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Jeg må dra nå! ____ B: De ligger i gangen.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Har du sett nøklene?

The response 'They are in the hallway' indicates the question was about the location of the keys.

🎉 Pontuação: /4

Recursos visuais

Banco de exercicios

4 exercicios
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'å se'. Fill Blank A1

Har du ____ nøklene?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: sett

After the auxiliary 'har', we use the past participle 'sett'.

Which sentence is the most natural when looking for your keys? Choose A1

Choose one:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Har du sett nøklene?

We use the definite plural 'nøklene' because we are looking for specific keys.

Match the Norwegian word to its English meaning. Match A1

Combine cada item a esquerda com seu par a direita:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: a

These are the basic components of the phrase.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A1

A: Jeg må dra nå! ____ B: De ligger i gangen.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Har du sett nøklene?

The response 'They are in the hallway' indicates the question was about the location of the keys.

🎉 Pontuação: /4

Perguntas frequentes

10 perguntas

Yes, if you are looking for only one specific key.

'Sett' means 'seen', while 'funnet' means 'found'. You ask if someone has 'seen' them to help you 'find' them.

In Norwegian, the 'r' in the plural 'nøkler' drops out when adding the definite suffix '-ene'.

Yes, it is perfectly polite and neutral.

Yes! Just say 'Har du sett mobilen?'.

You say 'Nei, jeg har ikke sett dem'.

It is masculine (en nøkkel).

Yes, but 'nøklene mine' is much more common in spoken Norwegian.

Say 'Har du sett bilnøklene?'.

In very casual speech, you can drop it: 'Sett nøklene?'.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

Hvor er nøklene?

similar

Where are the keys?

🔗

Jeg finner ikke nøklene

builds on

I can't find the keys

🔗

Har du sett mobilen?

similar

Have you seen the phone?

🔗

Låse døra

specialized form

To lock the door

🔗

Nippel

contrast

Nipple/Small part

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