Friday, September 28, 2012

How to say 'or' in Finnish

Two little words, and they both mean or. What is the difference?

Tai


Tai is used in commands and in affirmative sentences, but also in questions. In a question, tai is used when there is a hidden idea of for example or or something else. 

  • Osta mansikoita tai kirsikoita. - Buy strawberries or cherries.
  • Mä soitan sulle huomenna tai ylihuomenna. - I'll call you tomorrow or the day after tomorrow.
  • Haluatko omenan tai appelsiinin? - Do you want an apple or an orange? (For example. Or something else to eat? You don't have to take anything.) Compare: Haluatko omenan vai appelsiinin? = I assume that you want either an apple or an orange, so now tell me which one.

If you want to be really annoying in Finnish, end all your sentences with tai jotain, which means or something. 


Vai


Vai is used when you have a certain amount of choices and you have to pick one. Vai is only used in questions. (Usually foreigners tend to overuse this one.)


Another common use of vai is vai mitä at the end of the sentence.

  • Tavataan keskustassa, vai mitä? - Let's meet in downtown, right? (or what?)





About the author of Random Finnish Lesson: 


My name is Hanna Männikkölahti. I am a professional Finnish teacher who gives private online lessons and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please read more in www.linktr.ee/hannamannikkolahti and follow this blog, if you want to be the first one to know when I post something new. 

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Talking about the time in Finnish (Mitä kello on? Mihin aikaan?)

Here's another post inspired by the traffic sources: someone had found this blog by searching lesson of clock in Finnish. I hope this will answer your questions and even more.

Different ways of asking the time:


  • Mitä kello on? - What time is it?
  • (Kuinka) paljon kello on? Paljonko kello on? - How much is the clock? 
  • Onko sulla kelloa? - Do you have a watch/clock? 

If you already know the numbers from 1 to 12, all you have to learn is these words:


  • yli - past, over
  • vaille / vailla - to (Either one is fine.)
  • puoli - half (Notice that we say half something instead of half past.)

We also use the numbers 13-24 in association with the clock, but you won't hear them in colloquial speech unless somebody wants to be very specific. On tv, you could hear something like Uutiset alkavat tänään  kello kaksikymmentäkaksi neljäkymmentä. (Today, the news will start at twenty two forty 22.40).

Some basic time expressions:


  • Kello on viisi yli seitsemän - The clock is five past seven.
  • Onko se jo puoli yhdeksän? - Is it half past eight already? ("Half nine") 
  • Bussi lähtee kaksikymmentä vaille kahdeksan. - The bus leaves at twenty to eight.
  • Elokuva alkaa vartin yli kymmenen. - The movie starts at a quarter past ten.
  • Notice the partitive in expressions with 'vaille':



When? At what time?


  • Milloin / Koska  te tulette? - When will you come?
  • Mihin aikaan se loppuu? - At what time will it end?  (Often monelta in spoken language)

When something happens at an even hour or half past, you need the ablative ending lta/ltä.


  • Tulen kuudelta. - I'll come at six.
  • Tavataan puoli kymmeneltä. - Let's meet a half past nine.

  Mitä kello on? What time it is? Milloin? When?                 
 1  Yksi Yhdeltä
 2  Kaksi Kahdelta
 3  Kolme Kolmelta
 4  Neljä Neljältä
 5  Viisi Viideltä
 6  Kuusi Kuudelta
 7  Seitsemän Seitsemältä
 8  Kahdeksan Kahdeksalta
 9  Yhdeksän Yhdeksältä
 10  Kymmenen Kymmeneltä
 11  Yksitoista Yhdeltätoista
12  Kaksitoista Kahdeltatoista


Notice that the d isn't really pronounced in spoken language. Instead, people say kaheksan, yheksän, yheltä, kahelta etc.

Do you want to know more about the numbers? Here's a post about the numbers in partitive and in genitive cases  and here's another one about the ordinal numbers.


About the author of Random Finnish Lesson: 

My name is Hanna Männikkölahti. I am a professional Finnish teacher who gives private online lessons and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please read more in www.linktr.ee/hannamannikkolahti and follow this blog, if you want to be the first one to know when I post something new.  

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Fighting in Finnish

Fighting is Finnish is almost as risky as having sex in Finnish, but you have to start from somewhere! Here are couple of fun structures with which you can surprise your friend who has chosen to nag about something pointless in Finnish.

Housuissas on


Housuissas on literally translates to In your pants there is/are and it is most commonly used to refer to the noun(s) mentioned in the comment, accusation or a complaint. There is no way to beat a good Housuissas on, or to carry the conversation in any civilized direction, so if you manage to say these magic words at the right time, you're the winner!


  • Se oli huono idea. (It was a bad idea.)
  • Housuissas on!

Isäs oli


Another one is Isäs oli, which translates to Your father was and is a short version of a quite vulgar Isäs oli kun sua teki = That's what your father was (like) when he made you. Like Housuissas on, it is not very constructive at all. Other versions are Äitis/Mutsis oli, and I've even heard Mummos oli. 

  • Miten sä olet aina myöhässä? (How come you're always late?)
  • Isäs oli!

  • Sä olet nyt tosi sekava. (You're very confusing now.)
  • Äitis oli!

Notice the interesting use of the remains of the possessive suffix si that is normally not used so much in the spoken language. For some reason, it is often used with close family members like Onko äitis jo eläkkeellä? - Is your mother already retired and Mitäs se sun veljes tekikään? - Tell me again, what did you brother do? 

Fighting verbs


  • tapella - to fight, often with fists but not necessarily (A frequentative form of tappaa!)
  • riidellä - to argue with words
  • kinastella - to argue a little bit, this is what siblings to all the time
  • väitellä - to have a debate


. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

About the author of this blog:

My name is Hanna Männikkölahti, and I am a native Finn who gives private lessons via Skype and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please leave a comment, if you have something to ask about Finnish or novels in easy Finnish. 


Lue lisää selkokirjoista: https://privatefinnishlessons.com/books/

Having sex in Finnish

I'm so glad that this vocabulary list exists, so I don't have to write one. If you want to read what regular Finns, whatever that is, write about sex, take a look at the sex forum on vauva.fi. Vauva means baby, but not in the Hey baby way.

If you want to spice up your life with Skype or phone sex in Finnish, Seksipuhelin Marjatta shows you how the magic is done. (And now have a nice day watching all the Kummeli videos on Youtube.)

Related posts:

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

About the author of this blog:

My name is Hanna Männikkölahti, and I am a native Finn who gives private lessons via Skype and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please leave a comment, if you have something to ask about Finnish or novels in easy Finnish.


Lue lisää selkokirjoistani: www.hannamannikkolahti.com
Voit myös seurata YouTube-kanavaani ja Podcast-kanavaani.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

How to use the Finnish verbs 'tavata' and 'tappaa'

One of the classic mistakes in Finnish is to mix up tavata, to meet, and tappaa, to kill. A typical sentence of this case would be

  • Tapan mun tyttöystävän vanhemmat ensi viikonloppuna. - I'll kill my girlfriend's parents next weekend. (Yes, it should be tapaan, I'll meet.)

There's also another similar verb to tavata, and confusingly, its basic form is also tavata. The meaning of this word is to spell, and the verb conjugation differs only in consonant gradation.

  • Missä te tapaatte? - Where will you meet?
  • Missä te tavaatte? - Where will you spell?




If you mix up these verbs,  Finns will still understand what you mean. However,  if you want to reach for the perfection, be aware of the difference between the three following verbs and their four important forms.

To meet: tavata, tapaan, tapasin, tavannut


  • Kuinka te tapasitte? - How did you meet?
  • Mihin aikaan tavataan? - At what time shall we meet? (Or spell, but meeting makes more sense.)

To spell, or to read (Finnish) syllables: tavata, tavaan, tavasin, tavannut


  • Vieläkö koulussa tavataan, kun opetellaan lukemaan? - Do they still spell the words in syllables when learning to read at school? 

(Notice that tavaaminen in Finnish means reading the words in syllables when learning how to read. It's not just listing the letters like in spelling bees. The question How do you spell your name? is  Kuinka sun nimi kirjoitetaan?, which literally means How your name is written?)

To kill: tappaa, tapan, tapoin, tappanut


  • Tappakaa ne hämähäkit! - Kill those spiders!
  • Mikä ei tapa, se vahvistaa. - What doesn't kill you makes you stronger.

This post was inspired by my friend Emili, who told me (in Finnish) about the interesting people she had spelled during the summer. She was pretty upset that nobody had corrected her during the last SEVEN years, but now she knows the difference! :)

Related post: Tapaaminen Nightwishin rumpalin kanssa


About the author of Random Finnish Lesson: 


My name is Hanna Männikkölahti. I am a professional Finnish teacher who gives private online lessons and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please read more in www.linktr.ee/hannamannikkolahti and follow this blog, if you want to be the first one to know when I post something new. 

Friday, September 14, 2012

How to say thank you in Finnish (Kiitos)

Here's a list of different thank yous.
In spoken language, kiitos is often kiitti.
The four important forms are kiittää, kiitän, kiitin and kiittänyt.

  1. Kiitos ruuasta. 
  2. Kiitos avusta
  3. Kiitos mielenkiintoisesta esitelmästä.
  4. Kiitos viimeisestä.
  5. Kiitos, että annoit minun nukkua kolmen tunnin päiväunet. 
  6. Kiitos nopeasta vastauksesta.
  7. Kiitos seurasta. 
  8. Kiitos itsellesi! 
  9. Kiitos tosi kivasta päivästä. 
  10. Kiitos, kun olet olemassa.
  11. Muistitko kiittää?
     


Käännökset - Translations:


  1. Kiitos ruuasta. (You may also see the spelling ruoasta) - Thanks for the food. 
  2. Kiitos avusta. - Thanks for the help. 
  3. Kiitos mielenkiintoisesta esitelmästä. - Thank you for the interesting presentation.
  4. Kiitos viimeisestä. - Thank you (for whatever happened last time we saw each other).
  5. Kiitos, että annoit minun nukkua kolmen tunnin päiväunet. - Thank you for letting me nap for three hours.
  6. Kiitos nopeasta vastauksesta. - Thank you for the quick answer.
  7. Kiitos seurasta. - Thanks for the company. 
  8. Kiitos itsellesi! - Thanks to you!
  9. Kiitos tosi kivasta päivästä. - Thank you for the very nice day.
  10. Kiitos, kun olet olemassa. - Thank you for being in this world.
  11. Muistitko kiittää? - Did you remember so say thank you?


Muista kiittää bussikuskia! - Remember to thank the bus driver!


This is one of my favourite things in Jyväskylä, and I do it in other towns, too: when people step out of the bus, they say (or shout, since they are quite far in the middle of the bus) a loud kiitos to the bus driver. 

I like to think that it's 

  1. Kiitos kyydistä - Thanks for the ride.
  2. Kiitos, kun pysähdyit. - Thanks for stopping.
  3. Kiitos matkaseurasta. - Thanks for the travel company (to the other passengers). 


About the author of Random Finnish Lesson: 

My name is Hanna Männikkölahti. I am a professional Finnish teacher who gives private online lessons and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please read more in www.linktr.ee/hannamannikkolahti and follow this blog, if you want to be the first one to know when I post something new. 


Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Shopping in a grocery store

Here's something for the beginners and for anyone who is bored with Angry Birds and wants to get addicted to a new game. Papumarket is a grocery store game on a website called Papunet. What a great way to practice the supermarket items in Finnish!

The game is all in Finnish, but here are the main  instructions and headings translated. I'm sure you'll figure out the rest. Have fun playing!

  • Harjoittele kaupassakäyntiä / maksamista. - Practice shopping / paying. 
  • Valitse vaikeustaso. - Choose the level of difficulty.

  • Ostoslista - Shopping list
  • Edellinen / Seuraava osasto - Previous / Next department
  • Valitse osasto - Choose the department
  • Kassalle - To the checkout

  • Hedelmät - Fruits
  • Juurekset ja vihannekset - Root vegetables and vegetables
  • Leipomotuotteet - Bakery products
  • Einekset ja säilykkeet - Prepared and canned foods
  • Mausteet, öljyt ja kastikkeet - Spices, oils and sauces
  • Jauhot, murot ja makaronit - Flours, cereals and macaronis
  • Liha, kala, kana - Meat, fish, chicken
  • Maitotuotteet - Dairy products
  • Virvoitusjuomat, kahvit ja teet - Soft drinks, coffees and teas
  • Pakasteet - Frozen foods
  • Makeiset ja naposteltavat - Candies and snacks
  • Koti ja hygienia - Home and hygiene

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Talking about work in Finnish

I noticed that somebody had found this blog by searching the keywords as verb, en töissä. Thank you for the post idea!

If you look up to work in a dictionary, the first suggestion is probably työskennellä. However, this verb is often used in kind of official situations and in job applications. I don't think I've ever used it in spontaneous speech.

  • Haluaisin työskennellä iltaisin ja viikonloppuisin. - I'd like to work evenings and weekends.
  • Työskentelin opiskeluaikoinani Hesburgerissa. - I used to work at Hesburger when I was a student.



Olla töissä = to be at work  



Tehdä töitä = to do work


  • Mä tykkään tehdä töitä kotona. - I like to work at home.
  • Tehdään vielä vartti töitä ja mennään sitten tupakalle. - Let's work for fifteen more minutes and then go for a cigarette.

You've probably noticed by now that the noun työ is often used in the plural form. Here are the three internal cases:

Töissä = at work


  • Olen töissä, mutta soitan sinulle iltapäivällä. - I'm at work, but I'll call you in the afternoon. 

Töistä = from work


  • Yritän lähteä töistä ennen neljää. - I'll try to leave from work before four o'clock.

Töihin = to work


  • Mihin aikaan sinä menet töihin? - At what time do you go to work?



About the author of Random Finnish Lesson: 


My name is Hanna Männikkölahti. I am a professional Finnish teacher who gives private online lessons and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please read more in www.linktr.ee/hannamannikkolahti and follow this blog, if you want to be the first one to know when I post something new. 

Saturday, September 8, 2012

How to use the Finnish word 'juttu'

If you don't remember some word in Finnish you can always try juttu. Here are some examples that show you how to use juttu in a sentence. How many do you understand?

  1. Hyvä juttu! 
  2. Älä häiritse, mulla on yksi juttu kesken. 
  3. Sun kannattaa lukea tämä juttu!
  4. Mä en kestä sen juttuja
  5. Mikä juttu tämä on? 
  6. Onko tämä teille tuttu juttu? 
  7. Saisinko mä näyttää sulle yhden jutun
  8. Oletko kuullut tästä jutusta? 
  9. Sauvakävely on mun juttu. 
  10. Unohdetaan koko juttu!


Here are the translations: 


  1. Hyvä juttu! - Great! Cool! That's a good thing!
  2. Älä häiritse, mulla on yksi juttu kesken. - Don't disturb me, I'm in the middle of something.
  3. Sun kannattaa lukea tämä juttu!  - You'd better read this article!
  4. Mä en kestä sen juttuja. - I cannot stand listening to his stories. 
  5. Mikä juttu tämä on? - What is this? What's going on? 
  6. Onko tämä teille tuttu juttu? - Are you familiar with this?
  7. Saisinkonäyttää sulle yhden jutun? - Could I show you something?
  8. Oletko kuullut tästä jutusta? - Have you heard about this case?
  9. Sauvakävely on mun juttu.  - Nordic walking is my thing.
  10. Unohdetaan koko juttu! - Let's forget about it!


About the author of Random Finnish Lesson: 


My name is Hanna Männikkölahti. I am a professional Finnish teacher who gives private online lessons and simplifies books into easy Finnish. Please read more in www.linktr.ee/hannamannikkolahti and follow this blog, if you want to be the first one to know when I post something new.