[Home]Finnish language

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Finnish is a member of the Finno Ugric language family which is spoken by about 5.5 million people, mainly in Finland; there are small Finnish-speaking minorities in the Sweden, Norway and Russia. Finnish is an [agglutinating language]? that like Hungarian? always has stress on the first syllables. Finnish is also an inflected? language which modifies both noun? and verb? forms depending on their role in the sentence?. There are quite a few Germanic loanwords in Finnish, for example kuningas from Germanic *kuningaz (cf. English king).

Writing

The Finnish alphabet consists of 29 letters, which includes the 26 latin letters used in English, as well as Å (A with a ring above), Ä (A with two dots above) and Ö (O with two dots above) which are treated as distinct letters and follow Z in the alphabetical order. Strictly speaking, Å is only used in Swedish person and place names. The writing system is phonological, with very few exceptions.

Phonetics

Originally, Finnish had no initial consonant clusters, this however is changing due to influence from other European language.
Older borrowings from (e.g.) Swedish have had initial consonant clusters eroded. For example "koulu" <- school, "tuoli" <- stool.
More recent borrowings have retained their clusters, for example "presidentti" <- president. However, it is common to hear these clusters eroded in speech ("residentti") particularly, though not exclusively, by Finns who have little or no Swedish/English.

Vowels

Like the Turkish language, Finnish has vowel harmony, i.e. only certain designated vowels can appear together in a morpheme. <i> and <e> are neutral vowels, but front vowels <y ö ä> never mix with back vowels <u o a>. e.g. tyttö is a possible Finnish morpheme (actually it means 'girl') because it has only front vowels, whereas *tytto is impossible because it has both front and back vowels.
Note that in the sections below, wherever 'a' is mentioned, 'ä' should also be understood, depending on vowel harmony.

Vowel phonemes

/a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ /u/

/y/ as in French <but>, Old English and Finnish spelling: <y> /9/ as in French <deux>, Finnish spelling: <ö> /}/ as in English <bat>, Finnish spelling: <ä>

Consonants

Consonant phonemes

/k/ /p/ /t/ /d/

Finnish has no voiced plosives - with the exception of /d/ that developed from /D/ (as in English <the>). Without /d/, Finnish has (in native words) no distinctive voice at all.

/h/ /l/ /m/ /n/ /N/ /r/ /s/ /v/

[S] (as English <sh>) and [f] only appear in non-native words.

Consonant gradation

Consonants preceding the inflection of a word (either noun or verb) is subject to consonant gradation. Broadly, a consonant will adopt a 'strong' form if the following syllable is 'open' - containing a double vowel or not ending in a consonant - and a 'weak' form otherwise.
The following is a partial list of strong -> weak correspondences:
't' -> 'd'
'k' -> ''
'p' -> 'v'
Note that in any given grammatical situation, the consonant can grade either way depending on the word involved. Here are some examples:
'mäki' (hill) -> 'mäen' (genitive form)
'ranta' (shore) -> 'rannan' (genitive form)
'ranne' (wrist) -> 'ranteen' (genitive form)
'tavata' (to meet) -> 'tapaan' (I meet)
'tietää' (to know) -> 'tiedän' (I know)
There are rare exceptions to the general rule, some of which are noted in the noun cases section.

Length

All phonemes except /v, d, N/ have distinctive length.

Minimal pairs:

/tuli/ 'fire' - /tu:li/ 'wind'

 - /tulli/ 'customs'

/muta/ 'mud' - /mu:ta/ 'other (partitive sg.)'

 - /mutta/ 'but'

Verb? forms

Tenses?

Finnish verbs have present, imperfect, perfect and pluperfect tenses.
Present: corresponds to English present and future tenses. For the latter, a time qualifier may need to be used to avoid ambiguity.
Imperfect: corresponds to English past continuous and past simple, indicating a past action which is complete but might have been a point event, a temporally extended event, or a repeated event.
Perfect: corresponds to the English present perfect ("I have eaten") in most of its usages, but can carry more sense than in English of a past action with present effects.
Pluperfect: corresponds to the English past perfect ("I had visited") in its usage.

Voices?

Finnish has two possible verb voices: active and passive. The active voice corresponds with that of English, but the passive voice has some important differences.
In fact, the Finnish passive would be better described as an "impersonal" form since there is no way of connecting the action performed with a particular agent and hence there is only one form of the passive. This should become clear through an example:
"talo maalataan" -> "the house is being painted"
The time when the house is being painted could be added: "talo maalataan marraskuussa" -> "the house will be painted in November"
The colour and method could be added: "talo maalataan punaiseksi harjalla" -> the house is being painted red with a brush"
But, nothing more can be said about the person doing the painting ! There is no mechanism for saying "the house is being painted by Jim"
Hence the form "maalataan" is the only one which is needed. Notice also that the subject of the verb (i.e. the object of the action) is in the nominative case. Verbs which govern the partitive case continue to do so in the passive, and where the subject is a personal pronoun, that goes into its special accusative form: "minut unohdettiin" -> "I was forgotten"
Because of its vagueness about who is performing the action, the passive can also translate the English "one does {something}", "{something} is generally done": "sanotaan että..." -> "they say that..."
In modern spoken Finnish, the passive form of the verb is used after "me" to mean "we do {something}" ("me tullaan" -> "we are coming") and on its own at the beginning of a sentence to mean "let's ..." ("mennään!" -> "let's go!"). In the first of these cases, the "me" cannot be ommitted without risk to comprehension, unlike with the 'standard' form "tulemme".
Formation of the passive will be dealt with under the verb types below.

Moods?

Indicative

Imperative

Potential

Infinitive?

Participle?

[Verbs Conjugation]?

Finnish verbs are usually divided into six groups depending on the stem type. All six types have the same set of endings, but the stems undergo (slightly) different changes when inflected.

Type I verbs

These are verbs whose infinitive forms end in vowel + 'a' (or 'ä' for front-vowel containing stems) , for example 'puhua' -> 'to speak', 'tietää' -> 'to know'. This group contains a very large number of verbs. Here is how 'tietää' conjugates in the present indicative:
minä tiedän -> I know
sinä tiedät -> you (singular) know
hän/se tietää -> (s)he/it knows
me tiedämme -> we know
te tiedätte -> you (plural/formal) know
he tietävät -> they know
The personal endings are thus -n, -t, -(doubled vowel), -mme, -tte, -vat. The stem consonant is strong in the third-person forms and weak otherwise. Note that for third person plural, this is an exception to the general rule for strong consonants.

Type II verbs

These are verbs whose infinitive forms end in two consonants + 'a', for example 'menna' -> 'to go'. This is another large group of verbs.
Present indicative
The stem is formed by removing the 'a' and its preceding consonant then adding 'e': menen, menet, menee, menemme, menette, menevät.
Imperfect indicative

Type III verbs

Verbs whose infinitives end in vowel + 'da', for example 'juoda' -> 'to drink', 'syödä' -> 'to eat'. This is a fairly large group of verbs, partly because one way in which foreign borrowings are incorporated into the Finnish verb paradigms is to add 'oida', for example, 'organisoida' -> 'to organise'.
The stem is formed by removing 'da' with no vowel doubling in the third person singular: juon, juot, juo, juomme, juotte, juovat.

Type IV verbs

This, and the following two groups, have infinitives ending in vowel + 'ta'. Most commonly, type IV verbs end with 'ata', 'ota', 'uta', but the other two vowels are possible. Examples are 'tavata' -> 'to meet', 'haluta' -> 'to want', 'tarjota' -> 'to offer'.
To form the stem, drop the 'ta' and add 'a' and change the consonant into its strong form: haluan, haluat, haluaa, haluamme, haluatte, haluavat; tapaan, tapaat, tapaa etc.; tarjoan, tarjoat, tarjoaa etc.

Type V verbs

All the verbs in this groups have infinitives ending in 'ita'. There are not that many of them, the most 'important' being 'tarvita' -> 'to need'
The stem is formed by dropping the final 'a' and adding 'se': tarvitsen, tarvitset, tarvitsee, tarvitsemme, tarvitsette, tarvitsevat.

Type VI verbs

There are not many of these verbs, and don't tend to be be commonly used.

Noun? forms

The Finnish language does not distinguish gender in nouns or even in personal pronouns: "hän" -> "he" or "she" depending on the referent. This leads Finnish speakers to muddle "he" and "she" when speaking English, which is very confusing for English speakers !

Cases

Finnish has fourteen (arguably fifteen or even sixteen) noun cases.
Nominative
The basic form of the noun
Characteristic ending: none
Example "talo" -> "a/the house", "kirja" -> "book", "mäki" -> "hill"
Partitive
characteristic ending: -a or -ta
The basic meaning of this case is "partialness". It's used in the following circumstances:
After numbers: "kolme taloa" -> "three houses"
For incomplete actions and ongoing processes: "luen kirjaa" -> "I'm reading a book"
After certain verbs, particularly those indicating emotions: "rakastan tätä taloa" -> "I love this house"
For tentative enquiries: "saanko lainata kirjaa?" -> "can I borrow the book?"
In places where English would use "some" or "any": "onko teillä kirjoja?" -> "do you have any books ?"
For negative statements: "talossa ei ole kirjaa" -> "there not a book in the house"
Genitive
Characteristic ending: -n added to stem possibly modified by consonant gradation: mäki -> mäen, talo -> talon
Basically indicating possession, but also the case of the direct object of a completed action. It is used preceding postpositions?.
"kirjan kuvat" -> "the book's pictures"
"talon edessä" -> "in front of the house"
Inessive
Characteristic ending -ssa added to genitive stem
The first of the six so-called "local" cases which as their basic meaning correspond to locational prepositions in English. The inessive carries the basic meaning "in": "talossa" -> "in the house"
Elative
Characteristic ending -sta added to genitive stem
The second of the local cases with the basic meaning "out of": "tuli talosta" -> "(he) came out of the house"
Illative
The third of the local cases with the basic meaning "into": "meni taloon" -> "(he) went into the house"
Adessive
Characteristic ending -lla added to genitive stem
The fourth of the local cases with the basic meaning "on": Example "mäellä" -> "on the hill"
Allative
Characteristic ending -lle added to genitive stem
The fifth of the local cases with the basic meaning "onto". Example: "mäelle" -> "onto the hill"
Ablative
Characteristic ending -lta added to genitive stem
The sixth of the local cases with the basic meaning "from off of" - a poor English equivalent, but necessary to distinguish it from "from out of" which would be elative.
Example: "mäeltä" -> "from (off) the hill"
Essive
Characteristic ending -na added to genitive stem but with strong consonant gradation
This case carries the meaning of a temporary state of being, often equivalent to the English "as a ..."
Example: "läpsi" -> "child", "läpsenä" -> "as a child", "when (I) was a child"
Translative
Characteristic ending -ksi added to genitive stem
This is the counterpart of the essive, with the basic meaning of a change of state. It is also used for expressing "in (a language)". For example "mäki englanniksi on 'hill'"
Instructive
Characteristic ending -n
This has the basic meaning of "by means of". It is a comparatively rarely used case, though it is found in some commonly used expressions.
For example "omin silmin" -> "with my own eyes"
It is also used with verbal infinitives to mean "by ...ing", for example "lentaen" -> "by flying", "by air"
Abessive
Characteristic ending -tta
This has the basic meaning of "without". This is a rarely used case, especially in the spoken language, but it is found in some commonly used expressions.
For example "... lukuun ottamatta" -> "without taking into account..."
Comittative
Characteristic ending -ne (plus a posessive suffix for the noun but not any adjectives). This ending is added to the plural stem, even if the noun is singular.
This is a rarely used case, especially in the spoken language. The meaning is "in company with" or "together with"
Example: "talo kirjoineen" -> "the house with its books"
Accusative
This is the case of the direct object and is sometimes used as a label when the genitive form is used in this role. The accusative role only has a separate form for [personal pronouns]?
minä -> minut, sinä -> sinut etc.
Prolative
This is only found in a few "fosilised" forms in modern Finnish (though it is alive and well in Estonian). Its meaning is "by way of" and the most used examples are "postitse" -> "by post", "puhelimitse" -> "by phone", and "meritse" -> "by sea".


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Edited November 30, 2001 12:23 am by SteveDay (diff)
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