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Finnish grammar

  Tags: Finnish | Grammar
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Jordan152
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United Kingdom
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 Message 1 of 6
17 October 2011 at 10:51pm | IP Logged 
Hello, could someone tell me what are the most important aspects of Finnish grammar?
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jdmoncada
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 Message 2 of 6
18 October 2011 at 12:15am | IP Logged 
That is a very broad question, and you may not get the best answer because of it. I will give you a general answer in return.

Vowel harmony is a big deal. It's not hard to learn, but it's important. For example, AOU go together and can play with EI. The other set of vowels (can't type 'em right now. Sorry.) go together and can use EI. You'll never find an individual word that mixes the vowels. Compound words can do that, but the individual words that make the parts will never have mixed vowels.

The other big deal thing in the language is obviously the use of grammatical cases. The agglutination is part of the wonder and beauty of the language. For example, there are 6 locative cases alone, and those will be the first you likely learn. They describe both internally and externally where things are going to, where they are right now, and where they are coming from. You'll also have to learn the partitive case, which is how direct objects are marked.

A third big thing is the use of agglutination. It's not merely that Finnish has cases but that several of them can be used together on the same word, which will cause some interesting and sometimes surprising changes in spelling.


So in my opinion, for whatever it's worth, those are the big 3 of Finnish grammar to get you started.
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Chung
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 Message 3 of 6
18 October 2011 at 1:04am | IP Logged 
Jordan152 wrote:
Hello, could someone tell me what are the most important aspects of Finnish grammar?


Not in any particular order, but you'd better know them well enough if you want a shot at making a half decent/reasonably coherent set of sentences in Finnish on your own as a beginner.

1) formation and use of the partitive (singular and plural), genitive singular from the nominative singular.
2) formation of present tense from the "main" infinitive (the formation of tenses and the other infinitives derive from a stem based either on the infinitive or present tense)
3) the grammatical differences between standard and colloquial Finnish - the latter is used A LOT and if you're not comfortable with it you may find "normal" speech to be difficult to understand or grammatically "wrong" (in comparison to the standard as taught to all students).
4) consonant gradation (especially with alternations of "k" and certain clusters with "k")
5) vowel harmony when determining which variant of most suffixes to use

The last two are in a gray area between morphology and phonology but if you don't get a handle on them, your sentences' grammar will be interpreted as "off" or at times unclear.
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a3
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 Message 4 of 6
18 October 2011 at 10:27am | IP Logged 
Chung wrote:

3) the grammatical differences between standard and colloquial Finnish - the latter is used A LOT and if you're not comfortable with it you may find "normal" speech to be difficult to understand or grammatically "wrong" (in comparison to the standard as taught to all students).
Where can I learn about those differences? I mean, not a course in colloquial Finnish, but a table or something where both versions are compared and the differences shown.
Standart language is very regular albeit it has thousands of rules. On the contrary, the colloquial language to me seems a random shortening of words that is completely irregular and makes no sense.
Thanks in advance.

Edited by a3 on 18 October 2011 at 10:27am

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DNB
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 Message 5 of 6
18 October 2011 at 11:08am | IP Logged 
a3 wrote:
Chung wrote:

3) the grammatical differences between standard and colloquial Finnish - the latter is
used A LOT and if you're not comfortable with it you may find "normal" speech to be
difficult to understand or grammatically "wrong" (in comparison to the standard as
taught to all students).
Where can I learn about those differences? I mean, not a course in colloquial
Finnish, but a table or something where both versions are compared and the differences
shown.
Standart language is very regular albeit it has thousands of rules. On the contrary,
the colloquial language to me seems a random shortening of words that is completely
irregular and makes no sense.
Thanks in advance.


Even though I'm a native, I'm not an expert on Finnish grammar. However, here are some
noun cases and how they are often contracted in colloquial speech, although some may
vary by dialect. I come from a region where words are sometimes shortened so much that
outsiders report misunderstandings.

Anyways,


Inessive (-ssa) vs. the colloquial(-s):

I live in a house
Standard: Minä asun talossa
Colloquial: Mä asun talos (not that 'Mä' is a casual variation of 'Minä'


Elative (-sta) vs. (-st)

I came from (inside) a house
Standard: Tulin talosta
Colloquial: Tulin talost

Basically, dropping the final vowel of the ending is common. Here is a table for the
Finnish noun cases Finnish noun
cases


With the rest:

genitive -n : This is the same in common speech, although in my area (Southwestern
Finland) this is often dropped when spoken fast, leaving the noun in its original form.
Most of the time it's preserved, though.

adessive -lla ---> -l

ablative -lta ---> -lt

allative -lle ---> -l (Note that the allative and abessive are reduced in the same way.
Usually the context clarifies which one it is.

essive -na ---> -n (Basically the same as the standard genitive form, but will be
understandable again from the context)

translative -ksi ---> -ks

instructive -n : This can be often replaced with -lla (or it's colloquial equivalent -
l) in common speech.

abessive -tta : Instead of saying 'talotta' (without a house), in common speech I
usually hear 'ilman taloa' used more often, where 'ilman' implies 'without' more
literally and the word 'talo' using the partitive instead of the abessive.

comitative -ne- : Stays the same as far as I know.


This kind of shortening is present in so many aspects of Finnish grammar that I don't
have time to list them all, but hopefully you got the gist.
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Chung
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 Message 6 of 6
18 October 2011 at 5:04pm | IP Logged 
a3 wrote:
Chung wrote:

3) the grammatical differences between standard and colloquial Finnish - the latter is used A LOT and if you're not comfortable with it you may find "normal" speech to be difficult to understand or grammatically "wrong" (in comparison to the standard as taught to all students).
Where can I learn about those differences? I mean, not a course in colloquial Finnish, but a table or something where both versions are compared and the differences shown.
Standart language is very regular albeit it has thousands of rules. On the contrary, the colloquial language to me seems a random shortening of words that is completely irregular and makes no sense.
Thanks in advance.


In addition to what DNB has posted, take a look at this article on Wikipedia and Spoken Finnish on Unilang.

Another way for you to compare Colloquial and Standard Finnish would be to look at the the section in each chapter of FSI Conversational Finnish's textbook called "Sequence [insert number here]" and play the audio for the "Sequences" while reading their text. The dialogues there are juxtaposed as standard and colloquial, and so you can see the differences.


3 persons have voted this message useful



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