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Swedish word of the day: nyfiken

Nyfiken is the Swedish adjective meaning 'curious'. Hear how it's pronounced in the clip below:

You can use nyfiken as a standalone adjective, describing someone's behaviour in general or at a specific point in time. So you could say: som barn var han alltid nyfiken (as a child, he was always curious/inquisitive) or nu är jag nyfiken (now I'm curious).

Note that Swedish nyfiken never has the meaning of 'peculiar' or 'strange', which 'curious' does in English. That means you can't use curious to describe an inanimate object (like a tree or a house) or an abstract concept. The phrase en nyfiken flicka (a curious girl) always means that the girl is inquisitive, whereas 'a curious girl' in English could either mean she is inquisitive or that she is peculiar.

The noun form of nyfiken is nyfikenhet, which translates in English as 'curiosity', and as an adverb it's nyfiket (curiously/inquisitively). And an interesting synonym of nyfiken is vetgirig, which literally means something like 'greedy to know'.

Nyfiken is often followed by the preposition på, if you want to say 'curious about' or 'curious to'. Nyfiken på can then be followed by a noun, by typical question words (hur, vad, vem), or by att and a verb. For example: jag är nyfiken på den strategin (I'm curious about that strategy), vi var nyfikna på vad vi skulle hitta i huset (we were curious about what we would find in the building), hon var nyfiken på att veta mer (she was curious to know more).

If you're thinking to yourself jag är nyfiken på ursprunget av ordet nyfiken (I'm curious about the origin of the word nyfiken), you're in luck.

In fact, it comes from the word fika, but not the fika you've probably heard of (the beloved break for coffee and cakes). The coffee break fika comes from a reversal of the syllables of kaffe (coffee), but fika existed as a completely separate verb in Swedish long before they coined that noun.

In very old Swedish, fika meant 'to hurry', 'to move fast', or 'to rush', and over time its meaning changed from physical movement to a more metaphorical one, so that it came to mean 'to strive (for something)' or 'to work hard (for sometRead More – Source

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