Not bad! Your vocabulary is improving all the time, so it will become easier to deduce the meaning of whole sentences. It definitely helps living in the country. I studied both French and German in high school and university, but I've never really used them for the past 20 years, so I've forgotten most of the vocabulary. With pihvi, maybe pronouncing it a bit like pihivi, with an extra i, might help. Actually in some dialects it sounds like pihivi.
Pihvi means steak or beefsteak, I believe it originally comes from the Swedish word biff (meaning beefsteak) and has transformed over the centuries. Jauhelihapihvi is literally minced meat steak. I don't know what you would call that in the UK, maybe hamburger?
kello is a clock not time which is aika, tarjoilija lit. a server from tarjota (to serve) and kaksitoista etc. means 2 of the second (between 10 and 20) and finally raaka means brutal but also raw in context of food (rare for beef) though technically medium rare = half raw depending how you look at it anyway so raaka(na) means as a raw, interestingly nobody ever says "half brutal" about a person so puoliraaka can never be anything but medium rare or half raw ie. badly cooked.
4 роки тому
Where the f* are you? Still alive? Please be alive, I like your tasting videos so much.
Your overall knowledge of basic words is really good, I was quite surprised. Best of luck with your future lessons :)
Thanks Pesu - I am learning a lot more now in classes!
Not bad! Your vocabulary is improving all the time, so it will become easier to deduce the meaning of whole sentences. It definitely helps living in the country. I studied both French and German in high school and university, but I've never really used them for the past 20 years, so I've forgotten most of the vocabulary.
With pihvi, maybe pronouncing it a bit like pihivi, with an extra i, might help. Actually in some dialects it sounds like pihivi.
Thanks for the tip! What does that word literally mean?
Pihvi means steak or beefsteak, I believe it originally comes from the Swedish word biff (meaning beefsteak) and has transformed over the centuries. Jauhelihapihvi is literally minced meat steak. I don't know what you would call that in the UK, maybe hamburger?
Yea it would be exactly that lol thanks for clearing that up!
Nicely done! I think I saw you on the bus, like one hour ago. I almost asked it from you, but naturally as a Finnish person I couldn't.
Wow really? Just wondering what bus you get? In Lahti yea?
@@LashofSnow Yes in Lahti, on a line 1 to Liipola, I sat right front of you :D
Haha! That's my bus! The dude with the ponytail?
@@LashofSnow Yes :) i watched your videos like a year ago and I was so confused that now you sit in a same bus with me :D
Haha that's so cool you should have said hello lol you would have been the 2nd person I'd ever met from the channel lol
Great job!
Kiitti Tommi!
You did well. :)
Thank you Jesse :D
Pretty good for someone who doesn't actually speak Finnish
Thank you - means a lot :)
kello is a clock not time which is aika, tarjoilija lit. a server from tarjota (to serve) and kaksitoista etc. means 2 of the second (between 10 and 20) and finally raaka means brutal but also raw in context of food (rare for beef) though technically medium rare = half raw depending how you look at it anyway so raaka(na) means as a raw, interestingly nobody ever says "half brutal" about a person so puoliraaka can never be anything but medium rare or half raw ie. badly cooked.
Where the f* are you? Still alive? Please be alive, I like your tasting videos so much.