Finno-Ugric Language

Finnish is a branch of the Finno-Ugric language family and even though it is surrounded by Indo-European languages like Swedish, Norwegian and Russian,
it is very different from them. If you want to know more, you might find This is Finland article or Britannica's public Web site link
on Finnish origin and Uralic languages interesting.

Articles

Finnish does not use articles (cf. English a, the) nor has gender masculine or feminine (cf. French un, une).
Both males and females are referred to with the same third person singular pronoun hän he/she. 

Pronunciation and Spelling

There is a clear relationship between the way a word is written and the way it is pronounced. A written letter is almost always represented by the same sound
(cf. the pronunciation of letter ‘a’ in English words cat, all, aim, where 'a' is pronunced differently in all three words).

Word Stress

All Finnish words have their main stress on the first syllable. The illustrations down highlight where the stress is in the word.
Listen carefully and repeat, and pay attention to the stress. Please feel free to practice as many times as needed.

auto
car



konsertti
concert


Sentence Intonation

Sentence intonation always falls off. It does not rise even in questions. The illustrations down highlight the intonation in the sentece.
Listen carefully and repeat, and pay attention to the intonation. Please feel free to practice as many times as needed.

Kuka sinä olet?
Who are you?

Minä olen Alex.
I’m Alex.

Vocabulary

sauna                                  Tukholma
s1 tukholma

Most of the Finnish words are original Finno-Ugric words like saunoa to take sauna. Finnish also has a lot of loanwords from Indo-European languages.

Many borrowed words have changed so much that it might be difficult to recognize the word because it cannot be associated with the original word.

  • Vowels may be added to the end of loanwords – most often “i” as in ‘pubi’ (cf. English pub).

  • Consonants are often doubled, as in ‘hattu’ (cf. English hat).

  • Because the letters b, c, d, f and g are not originally Finnish many loanwords use the nearest Finnish equivalents p, k or s, t, v, and k,
    for example the word bank becomes ‘pankki’. (b=p, k=kk, +i)

  • In consonant clusters like “st-” the first letters may be left out, for example ‘Tukholma’ (cf. Swedish Stockholm). By applying such logic backwards,
    you may be able to work out what some of the following loanwords mean, even if you do not speak Finnish (answers are below the audiofiles):

hotelli, museo, pubi

musiikki, teatteri, konsertti

salaatti, banaani, tomaatti

kahvi, viini, drinkki
piano, kitara, viulu

televisio, radio, stereot

kompromissi, systeemi, tekniikka
matematiikka, fysiikka, kemia
idea, projekti, raportti
materiaali, energia, bensiini
presidentti, professori, kokki
politiikka, demokratia, kriisi

hotel, museum, pub, music, theatre, concert
salad, banana, tomato, coffee, wine, drink
piano, guitar, violin, television set, radio, stereo
compromise, system, technique, mathematics, physics, chemistry
idea, project, report, material, energy, gasoline
president, professor, cook, politics, democracy, crisis

Compound Words and Suffixes

Finnish favors compound words, where two or more words stick together.

Minuuttibaari                           Piparkakkutalo
Minuuttibaari piparkakkutalo

minuutti + baari = minuuttibaari (minute bar)          pipar + kakku + talo = piparkakkutalo (gingerbread house)                                      
haju + vesi = hajuvesi
perfume (literally odourwater)
ruoka + kauppa = ruokakauppa
grocery store (literally foodmarket)
Finnish uses many suffixes for forming new words from the existing ones. Some examples:
raha, rahaton
money penniless, broke
työ, työtön
work, unemployed
kahvi, kahvila
coffee, coffee shop
ravinto, ravintola
nutrition, restaurant
Last modified: Sunday, 6 September 2020, 5:35 PM