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SWEDISH WORD OF THE DAY

Swedish word of the day: sugen

Today's word is used to tell someone what you want, what you really really want. 'Sugen' can be translated as 'craving', 'desire', or 'really wanting (something)'.

Swedish word of the day: sugen
Photo: Annie Spratt/Unsplash/Nicolas Raymond

Sugen is usually accompanied by the preposition på to create the phrase sugen på, and excitingly it can be combined with both nouns and verbs. 

For instance, you could say jag är sugen på en fika, where en fika (roughly translated as a short coffee and/or cake break) is the noun, or jag är sugen på att ta en fika, pairing the phrase with the verb att ta. Both of these translate as something like ‘I’m craving a fika’, ‘I’m in the mood for fika’, or ‘I fancy a fika (in British English)’.

When used with nouns, sugen is most often used to cravings related to food or drink, but with verbs it can be paired with almost any phrase. You can also use it in the negative: Ingen var sugen på att prata (No one felt like talking).

Alternatively, you can use sugen as a suffix, such as jag är kaffesugen (craving coffee) or semestersugen (craving a holiday). These words can also be used before the adjective, and the ending of sugen declines to agree with the noun it’s describing: for example, två kaffesugna män (two men who were craving coffee).

You can also describe yourself as just sugen in general, which would mean you feel like eating a (usually unhealthy) snack, as opposed to wanting food because you’re hungry (that would be hungrig).

And bear in mind that you can also tappa sugen (literally: to drop or lose the craving), which means to lose motivation or generally feel like giving up.

The noun ett sug is stronger and has slightly different connotations, so ett kaffesug refers to a much stronger and constant craving for coffee, and ett alkoholsug means ‘an addiction to alcohol’. Similarly, the phrase suget efter means ‘craving for’ in a much stronger sense than sugen på: typically the former phrase refers to persistent cravings often with negative consequences, while the latter is more of a passing fancy.

To avoid further sugen confusion, you should also be aware that sugen also appears in a different context, as the perfect participle of the verb att suga.

This means ‘to suck’ and is used in a few ways – the literal sense to describe sucking up liquid or dust (like in the word for a vacuum cleaner, dammsugare) as well as in the Americanised slang sense of describing something negative (det suger – that sucks).

You can also use it in the phrase att suga på karamellen (literally: to suck on the boiled sweet), which describes trying to extend the enjoyment of a particular thing as long as possible.

Example sentences:

Jag är verkligen sugen på en kopp kaffe och en kanelbulle.

I’m really craving a cup of coffee and a cinnamon bun.

Hjälp, jag har tappat sugen.

Help, I’ve lost all motivation.

Don’t miss any of our Swedish words and expressions of the day by downloading our new app (available on Apple and Android) and then selecting the Swedish Word of the Day in your Notification options via the User button.

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SWEDISH WORD OF THE DAY

Swedish word of the day: bröllop

Did you know that the Swedish word for 'wedding' can be traced back hundreds of years?

Swedish word of the day: bröllop

Bröllop comes from the Old Swedish word bruþlöp, made up of the words brud (bride) and löpa (run). The latter refers to the bridal couple’s journey through the village back to the groom’s farm after the ceremony, to show off their union and happiness to all their neighbours.

The formal act of getting married is called vigsel, and bröllop is the umbrella term for the ceremony and the party afterwards (bröllopsfesten).

  • Don’t miss any of our Swedish words and expressions of the day by downloading our app (available on Apple and Android) and then selecting the Swedish Word of the Day in your Notification options via the User button

Swedish wedding traditions have changed over the years, but one thing that’s always remained the same is that they’re usually associated with a grand party for family and friends.

As early as the 14th century, Sweden’s first nationwide set of laws laid out by the King dictated that any couple getting married must send out two men and two women to go door to door inviting guests to the wedding party.

In the countryside, guests from the various farms often brought food along as a kind of potluck dinner, competing with each other over who could present the best meal. It was seen as an event for the entire village, who often celebrated for several days.

For a brief period in the 19th century, getting married at home rather than in the church was trendy among the bourgeoisie, but church weddings soon became all the rage again, according to SO-rummet, a website for social science and history teachers.

In the 1970s, weddings became simpler affairs, followed by another revival in the 1990s, after which they again appear to have reverted back to a more relaxed dinner with friends.

EXPLAINED:

Church weddings are again falling out of fashion. At the turn of the millennium, more than half of all couples married in church, compared to around a third today.

Traditionally, Swedish couples walk in together, to demonstrate that they both enter into the marriage of their own free will, but it’s become more common in recent years for the father to walk the bride down the aisle, possibly inspired by Hollywood movies.

The key roles in a Swedish wedding party are:

Bride – brud

Groom – brudgum

Wedding officiant – vigselförättare

Maid of honour – brudtärna

Best man – marschalk (although more and more say “best man”)

Flower girl – brudnäbb

What about the hen night and stag do? They’re the möhippa and svensexa in Swedish.

Example sentences:

Jag vill helst ha ett litet bröllop

I’d like a small wedding best

Vem ska vi bjuda på vårt bröllop?

Who should we invite to our wedding?

Villa, Volvo, Vovve: The Local’s Word Guide to Swedish Life, written by The Local’s journalists, is available to order. Head to lysforlag.com/vvv to read more about it. It is also possible to buy your copy from Amazon USAmazon UKBokus or Adlibris.

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