Introduction to the Finnish Language

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  • Опубліковано 27 кві 2024
  • Where is Finnish spoken? Where did it come from? What does it look and sound like?
    This video presents the Finnish language and gives a brief overview of its geographical distribution, history, writing system, linguistic relationships, grammar and sound.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @peikko3304
    @peikko3304 5 років тому +1834

    I'm finnish, why am I watching this

    • @herobroilerii
      @herobroilerii 4 роки тому +161

      Koska sä haluat ehkä alitajuntaisesti tietää, onko tässä videossa virheitä. Ite ainakin tulin kattoo tätä virheitten ja tylsyyden takia :D

    • @jaffajoffer6300
      @jaffajoffer6300 4 роки тому +79

      Koska mitä meistä puhutaan sekä suosituksissa..

    • @entiia3052
      @entiia3052 4 роки тому +59

      Koska voit flexaa sil et osaat nää asiat jo

    • @rapu7820
      @rapu7820 4 роки тому +22

      Koska voit

    • @eerojaakkola
      @eerojaakkola 4 роки тому +4

      @@herobroilerii sama

  • @finnsalsa9304
    @finnsalsa9304 7 років тому +1535

    Holy ö! I've never ever heard a foreinger pronouncing Finnish this well! You seriously sounded almost like a native person.

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +254

      Thank you for the compliment! :) (though mostly pronouncing one word at a time helps!)

    • @Thekellin1
      @Thekellin1 7 років тому +14

      How did you train this good accent?

    • @citadelofwinds1564
      @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому +30

      "Holy ö!" That is so so funny. Especially given that in Finnish, ö is a very rare breed, while ä accounts for about 5% of the letters in usage statistics. So I would indeed hold ö as a rare and precious little thing to be treated with reverence. :)

    • @jancovanderwesthuizen8070
      @jancovanderwesthuizen8070 5 років тому +27

      Holy Island?

    • @nikoahonen7048
      @nikoahonen7048 5 років тому +13

      I have to agree, that was very close! And when I say very close, it sounded nearly pefect. I can tell because I am a native speaker.

  • @sarahgray430
    @sarahgray430 6 років тому +862

    Finnish is an incredibly beautiful language, but I can tell why it's considered one of the hardest languages to learn.

    • @TheZebinatorofficial
      @TheZebinatorofficial 6 років тому +150

      Because it has very few family languages, while in the rest of Europe basically all languages are germanic plus latin, so if you understand Swedish, you can read Danish and Norwegian without any problem (pronounciation is different obviously). I know Danish, Swedish and English and I can guess myself through german, dutch, swiss, french and most of the west European languages, the further south it gets it's harder but you can usually understand enough to get the basic message. Finnish however? Hah good luck dude, as a native Swedish speaker I look at Finnish like it's chinese with latin characters :P

    • @sampokemppainen3041
      @sampokemppainen3041 6 років тому +33

      It is because there's no global interest in teaching it. It's quite basic and not so hard to learn.

    • @luuttaja
      @luuttaja 5 років тому +75

      @@sampokemppainen3041 It is hard. Just not for us finns as we start learning it right away when we get born

    • @krush59
      @krush59 5 років тому +28

      As a european it's more or less easy to get into the most other european languages- at least some basics. You just need some vocabulary and know some grammar stuff to form sentences und then you can move on from there.
      In Finnish, even with a huge vocabulary knowledge it's still hard to form correct sentences if you are not familiar with all the cases etc.

    • @herramirtsaaja9032
      @herramirtsaaja9032 5 років тому +12

      @@krush59 I allways thought it was the other way around and still do unless I understood what you meant wrong because finnish has a good stone for rules unlike english is a mess. Why when you have the vowels why dont they allways stay the same vowels for example the words dont and you the o in there doesnt work the same way its supposed to wtf. And then y is supposed to not be a vowel what about the word dynamite its now the same as a for some reason

  • @osmark86
    @osmark86 3 роки тому +22

    Swede here. Finnish is such a cool language. Cheers to my brothers and sisters across the pond!

  • @cesilias2419
    @cesilias2419 4 роки тому +1236

    Suomi gäng
    👇🏻

  • @timothykarlsson3126
    @timothykarlsson3126 4 роки тому +229

    Swede here to support our Finnish cousins, cheers!

    • @bigwoke8747
      @bigwoke8747 4 роки тому +24

      Kippis

    • @legogonkdroid3792
      @legogonkdroid3792 4 роки тому

      Jeh jeh you realy suppertonesus

    • @samitissari3268
      @samitissari3268 4 роки тому +12

      Btw why we finnish People have to learn swedish but swedes dont

    • @legogonkdroid3792
      @legogonkdroid3792 4 роки тому +12

      "No koska suomen vientituotteista 20% menee ruotsiin'' t:mun porukat

    • @timothykarlsson3126
      @timothykarlsson3126 4 роки тому +11

      @@samitissari3268 Probably because Finland used to be a part of Sweden :P

  • @tilliperuna
    @tilliperuna 7 років тому +232

    Now that's how you do an introduction! In my opinion, as a Finn and a language enthusiast, you covered much if not all the necessary basics to understanding the Finnish language. I will definitely share this video to people that are interested in Finnish , keep up the good work!
    Edit: Subscribed.

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +12

      Thank you very much! I definitely intend to!

    • @halvanhelev
      @halvanhelev 7 років тому +8

      I agree, this was a great video. Even as a Finn I think I learned a little bit more :P

    • @SleepingGroke
      @SleepingGroke 7 років тому +2

      Kääk! Qmmitus! :D

  • @vikarhu3372
    @vikarhu3372 5 років тому +57

    This dude speaks extraordinarily fluid finnish.

  • @usvakiuru2
    @usvakiuru2 5 років тому +68

    Finally a video that has doesn’t just have someone absolutely butchering these words.

  • @rzeka
    @rzeka 7 років тому +303

    I love the Finnish language so much. I love the way it sounds, and I love the way the grammar works.

    • @Oupii313
      @Oupii313 7 років тому +5

      i shall help you to learn it if you need help

    • @Kapoor_Kshatriye
      @Kapoor_Kshatriye 7 років тому

      I want to learn Finnish too!

    • @Oupii313
      @Oupii313 7 років тому

      Bhuvnesh Kapoor sure, happy to help

    • @Kapoor_Kshatriye
      @Kapoor_Kshatriye 7 років тому +1

      MrLepola Good.
      From where should we start !

    • @Kapoor_Kshatriye
      @Kapoor_Kshatriye 7 років тому

      My user id- bhuvneshbhanukapoor

  • @mikrokupu
    @mikrokupu 7 років тому +141

    Great introduction, thanks! I'm a native Finnish speaker and it still shows when I speak English. It's like my brains has problems separating genders in speak, I easily mix he/she

    • @Alvarnea
      @Alvarnea 7 років тому +10

      When I'm speaking and not really focusing on either my pronounciation nor my sentences in any way (basically returning to rally english and rolling my r's and being generally really lazy with everything), I easily say he when I meant to say she. I think it's just because my mouth is being lazy and saying 'she' is just a tiiiny bit more work. XD

    • @jojoUK120
      @jojoUK120 5 років тому +7

      Alvarnea Oh you don’t need to stop rolling r - just pretend you’re Scottish 😉

    • @suaptoest
      @suaptoest 5 років тому +2

      @@jojoUK120 I'm training to speak like Billy Connolly.
      His Glasgow accent is brilliant. We have a dialect with a somewhat similar intonation.

    • @Quadronnn
      @Quadronnn 5 років тому +13

      Sorry for replying to such an ancient comment, but I thought it was fitting how you referred to your "brains" immediately after mentioning how your Finnish shows when speaking English. For those not in the know, the Finnish word for "brain" is, of course, "aivot", making it plural, so that's probably a pretty common mistake for a Finnish speaker to make when speaking English. It's important for us Finns to remember that, unlike us, the poor English-speakers only have one brain.

    • @hugeturd42
      @hugeturd42 5 років тому

      @@Alvarnea sama täällä

  • @4N9vxO3WnK
    @4N9vxO3WnK 7 років тому +178

    Me as a finnish speaker, learnt something new. I never knew about the vocal groups! Very well made video

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +31

      Thank you! I'm happy to hear it! Isn't it a great feeling when you suddenly realize something about how your native language works?

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 6 років тому +8

      nnovl You did know, but only intuitively, not consciously. You have been usin them all the time :)
      But a language learner needs this advice to get into the language.

    • @prolainen8997
      @prolainen8997 5 років тому +5

      i thought this is taught in middle school

    • @TheJere213
      @TheJere213 5 років тому +4

      @@prolainen8997 I don't remember if it was taught in middle school but high school at least. Might have been in middle school too

    • @prolainen8997
      @prolainen8997 5 років тому

      @@TheJere213 i learnt this in 5th grade

  • @Darkenedbyshadows
    @Darkenedbyshadows 7 років тому +344

    How is your pronunciation so good?! Are you also Finnish? Greetings from Finland!!!

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +181

      No, I'm Swedish! Thank you for the complement :) I'd say my pronunciation is the result of listening and practicing, mostly! It helps that you can hear a fair bit of Finnish in Sweden, but of course I've done my share of studying too!

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 7 років тому +29

      I heard some little foreign effect in a few words, like lattia, where you exaggerted the darkness, backness of the a vowels.
      But, I didn't guess you were Swedish, so good job in fading your native accent! :)

    • @Achilles94627
      @Achilles94627 4 роки тому +8

      @@AcademiaCervena Your English is pretty decent as well… ;)

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast 4 роки тому +9

      @@timomastosalo I didn't guess he was Swedish: I honestly thought he was an American (I'm British, btw).

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 4 роки тому +3

      @@DieFlabbergast we're neighbouring countries, like she pointed out that a swede can hear a lot of Finnish even their home country.
      We Finns hear 2 type of Swedish: the one spoken in Finland, and the one in Sweden. The difference is roughly like that between US and UK English.

  • @Frahamen
    @Frahamen 6 років тому +1037

    I started to Learn Suomen Kieli. But I coudn't Finnish...

  • @josedelsud
    @josedelsud 5 років тому +49

    As a Spanish native speaker son of Polish parents and language enthusiast, you got a new subscriber. I have a couple of Finnish friends and we communicate in English. Spanish and Finnish has nothing in common but it's not too hard to pronounce for me, main differences are Y, J, H and the "extra" wovels, the rest sounds like Spanish. Kiitos paljon! 👍❤️

    • @gJonii
      @gJonii 5 років тому +9

      I've known some Spanish speakers, it's uncanny how easy pronouncing Finnish comes to them.

    • @Hairysteed
      @Hairysteed 5 років тому +7

      The distinction between short and long sounds seems to be one of the hardest things to learn in Finnish language.
      tule - come (imperative)
      tulee - comes
      tullee - probably comes
      tuule - (wind) blow (imperative)
      tuulee - the wind is blowing
      tuullee - the wind is probably blowing

    • @Stripedbottom
      @Stripedbottom 5 років тому +6

      Actually, finnish and spanish do have one big thing in common, and you just described it: There is very little difference in the written and pronounced forms of the language. Each letter and combination of letter is typically pronounced the same no matter where or how it appears, and each letter is also typically pronounced very precisely and distinctively. If a spanish speaker speaks slowly and methodically, I can write down pretty much exactly what they said without having a clue about what it means. Once I learn the few exceptions (J sounds like H, double L as J etc.) I have no problem with those either. No hope in hell to do the same with a french speaker, for example. This is actually a pretty massive advantage for a finnish speaker trying to learn spanish compared to many other indo-european languages, and is also why many finnish speakers like the spanish language and the sound of it - it sounds clear, precise and no-nonsense :)

    • @iapologizeformyselfishbeha4889
      @iapologizeformyselfishbeha4889 4 роки тому +1

      Oh hey. I've been learning a little spanish and i'm finnish.
      Hola, encantada. Que tal? I know basic greetings and introductions. And some other stuff too. Like counting from uno to diez.

  • @VJEManninen
    @VJEManninen 7 років тому +37

    I usually avoid commenting, but I must say: this was a stellar performance. I'm a Finn myself, and this video taught me some things I was not aware of, and it was able to articulate many things I knew but would not have been able to put forth so clearly. Thanks a bunch - hope many others will see and enjoy this!

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +3

      Very happy to be able to contribute in this way! There are often so many things to discover in how your own native language functions!

    • @citadelofwinds1564
      @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому

      Indeed. So many points of grammar are not covered at school because it's taken for granted that "everyone knows them". These are often the very quirks that differentiate that language from other languages. Learning another language really makes one understand and appreciate one's native language better.

  • @code8239
    @code8239 7 років тому +476

    wow... somebody did their research :D
    Usually this kind of videos make me facepalm but this is perfect one!
    For a moment I thought u were finn aswell until you tried pronounce finnish words (I have never heard foreing doing it so well 10 internet point's for u)
    Just wondering, do you know why non-finns calls Karjala as Karelia? Too hard to pronounce?

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +58

      Kiitos paljon! :) I'm glad you liked it! My Finnish pronunciation is still a work in progress, but it's good to hear that it's doing a good job!
      As for Karelia, I can't say for certain, but my educated guess would be that the _Karel-_ part comes from how the Swedes and/or Russians interpreted the name (cf. Swedish _Karelen_), and then you have the Latin country suffix _-ia_, which is where English got it from.

    • @code8239
      @code8239 7 років тому +25

      well... that would explain it.
      btw, "Suomi mainittu" is kind of meme in Finland(you probably knew it already) and that makes me wonder what makes Finland intresting?
      What I mean is that after Nokia died, there is really nothing we can provide, except engineers. Probably the only country in the world overflown by them. Germany is famous of their tech and cars, France is fueled by fashion and so on.... I really can't figure out why people would like to study finnish or even think to live here. I can't see any benefit about us. (government is flushing this country down to sewer anyway, so non-existing healthcare is only matter of time)

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +69

      Well, you don't need an industry to be interesting :)
      Finland and the Nordic countries have high standards of living, low corruption, and a lot of nature and open space. Such things are enough to captivate a lot of people!
      Also, many people just love languages without caring where they come from. Since Finnish is quite different from most Western European languages, that's enough to make it interesting to a lot of language enthusiasts as well.

    • @sampokemppainen3041
      @sampokemppainen3041 6 років тому

      I want to know what things in other videos made you facepalm.

    • @nikoahonen7048
      @nikoahonen7048 5 років тому +2

      I think it's just the English word for Karjala...

  • @regdenee
    @regdenee 6 років тому +50

    You should make more of these! I'm currently studying Finnish and this video really helped me out!

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  6 років тому +5

      I will :) Both new language intros and Finnish videos are in the works!

    • @asnek2527
      @asnek2527 5 років тому +4

      Suomi pekrele kossu kalja makkarakeitto karjalanpiirakka mee töihi joo this makes no sense what i am writing

    • @aaebsssb9914
      @aaebsssb9914 4 роки тому

      Terve. Suomi on hyvä kieli

    • @arttu.rajala
      @arttu.rajala 4 роки тому

      Miksi vitussa

  • @guloguloguy
    @guloguloguy 5 років тому +14

    .....IMHO: THIS NARRATOR'S COMMAND OF THE PRONUNCIATION, OF SO MANY OF THESE LANGUAGES, IN THESE VIDEOS, IS EXTREMELY IMPRESSIVE, AND INSPIRING!!!!! "BRAVO!!!!!" THE HIGHEST RESPECT TO YOU, SIR!!!!

  • @JohnJohnson-fo5vl
    @JohnJohnson-fo5vl 5 років тому +12

    Very fascinating video, well researched, compact and evenly interesting from the start to the end, that's how you do a video.

  • @citadelofwinds1564
    @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому +29

    This was a great, not overly daunting intro to Finnish, showing both the familiar features (loanwords from Germanic) and the unusual features of the language. The book excerpt at the end really provided a taste of the "flavour" of Finnish.
    I've had a lifelong interest in languages and linguistics, and can say that this and the other intro video I've watched are among the very best I've come across, particularly in the clarity of the grammar explanations. I've never before come across the detailed colour coding, and that truly helps to visually find - and importantly to better remember - the key points.
    Perhaps the only issue is that the red may be too dark against the black background, and would cause trouble for colourblind people. Red, green, blue and violet would be most troublesome. Orange, yellow, pink, light blue and light green would be most legible against the black.
    So, thanks for preparing this material and keep making more videos.

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  6 років тому +3

      Thank you for your kind words! Your comment shows that the video has come across just as I hoped it would :)
      I've tried to adapt the colors better in my newer videos, especially using slightly brighter tones of red. It's one of those things that I honestly didn't even think about at first, so it's good that people pointed it out to me!
      More content is always in the works!

  • @lesalmin
    @lesalmin 5 років тому +11

    The best short introduction to finnish I have seen.

  • @annateacheraustralia9868
    @annateacheraustralia9868 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you for the introduction! Kiitos! 👍

  • @MrZarewna
    @MrZarewna 5 років тому +2

    Absolutely fantastic video. So well explained and pronounced. I'm amazed.

  • @shahadmoeen1290
    @shahadmoeen1290 7 років тому +24

    finally ! another great video, thank you for your efforts, you are doing a great job ! .

  • @keaseball
    @keaseball Рік тому +6

    I love the Finnish language and would love to travel to Finland one day! Greetings from Germany 🇩🇪🇫🇮☺️

  • @akselitohjonen2064
    @akselitohjonen2064 6 років тому +1

    Thank you Academia Cervena for this excellent introduction to the wonder that is the Finnish language. There are not many a youtube video, where the basic structure of the language is explained this easily and comprehensibly. I will recommend this video to anyone who shows some interest in the language.
    Well done, well done indeed!

  • @tomasmogos6239
    @tomasmogos6239 4 роки тому +1

    I'm happy with your lesson program!

  • @TheAsoPeso
    @TheAsoPeso 4 роки тому +4

    As a Finn I was very surprised about all this information in 10 minutes. I even learned something new myself! Very comprehensive and well presented video, full 10 points!

  • @sdfdsv
    @sdfdsv 7 років тому +54

    It sounds so lovely

  • @curtpiazza1688
    @curtpiazza1688 2 роки тому +2

    Great presentation...thanx!

  • @takoja507
    @takoja507 7 років тому +1

    That was very nice video and informatitive about the history of our languages also. Thank you :)

  • @jeresalonen7643
    @jeresalonen7643 5 років тому +5

    Wow!
    As a native speaker of finnish, I find this very informational as a introduction to the mechaniscs of the finnish language for foreigners!
    Good job!! 😎👍🏻

  • @NinaNooneknows
    @NinaNooneknows 5 років тому +4

    Great pronunciation there! At first I thought you were just saying the words awkwardly (mic shyness or something, I get that), and I still wasn't sure if you were a native or not until I read your comment! Hyvää työtä. c:

  • @fukayyy2447
    @fukayyy2447 4 роки тому +2

    Easy to understand!
    I want to watch more videos of Finnish!
    I'm looking forward to new videos.

  • @arthurmorgan384
    @arthurmorgan384 4 роки тому +2

    Usually these kind of videos are trash but you have suprised me.
    Subcribed ❤

  • @OnumLCT
    @OnumLCT 6 років тому +128

    What the hell man are you a Uralic speaker in disguise? Your pronunciation sounds so native

    • @aaebsssb9914
      @aaebsssb9914 4 роки тому +4

      It sounds about 75% accurate

    • @nika-bx2gl
      @nika-bx2gl 4 роки тому

      Poopoo

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 4 роки тому

      If you are native it doesn’t speak native but it’s a good effort!

    • @bg3622
      @bg3622 3 роки тому

      Pretty sure it's easier for speakers of phonetic languages to pronounce other words. As a Turkish person I was told by my internet Fin that I was pronouncing Finnish words "better than expected".

    • @JosueLopez-kk9us
      @JosueLopez-kk9us 3 роки тому

      @@bg3622 I hope that holds true for me as well, I speak spanish as a my NL

  • @elcuajinais6399
    @elcuajinais6399 3 роки тому +4

    I´m Mexican and maaaaaan, we talk in so different accents and sub languages but the pronuntiation of finnish, DAAAAAAAAAMN they are masters of lyrics. I really want learn finnish, if someone here need help with Latin Spanish, Argentinian, Chilean, Mexican from north, Mexican from South, Colombian, etc, i can give you a hand if you teach me a little bit of this beautiful language (Suomi). Greetings from Monterrey Mx. ñ.ñ

  • @tqooaez961
    @tqooaez961 6 років тому +1

    Wow, this was informative! good job!

  • @lezswing
    @lezswing 4 роки тому +2

    Loistava video, kiitos!!

  • @user-ub2jp7tg6k
    @user-ub2jp7tg6k 7 років тому +5

    This is great

  • @CloudyFlow
    @CloudyFlow 4 роки тому +5

    really well pronounced Finnish for a foreigner, great effort.

  • @user-ji6ip7ou8d
    @user-ji6ip7ou8d 2 місяці тому

    This is one of the most straightforward videos about languages I've ever seen. The Finnish turns out to be a very beautiful language

  • @naakatube
    @naakatube 6 років тому +2

    Great your channel should be more famous!

  • @amplifymysound
    @amplifymysound 7 років тому +4

    good video

  • @dargon881
    @dargon881 7 років тому +6

    Please do more video about Finnish language. Grammar videos are desired

  • @noth606
    @noth606 4 роки тому +1

    Your pronunciation is excellent, that's impressive.

  • @Wowtikkala
    @Wowtikkala 4 роки тому +1

    Well studied mister! Your pronounciation is muito bom! I'm currently studying brazilian portuguese, and it's interesting to see educational materials like this of my native language. Hyvin tehty!

  • @cayenigma
    @cayenigma 6 років тому +28

    I am a native speaker of Finnish, and even I learnt something new. Apparently it was pointless to teach these vowel groups to us back at school, lol

    • @citadelofwinds1564
      @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому +3

      Indeed. When people learn a language from birth, everything is taken for granted and as natural, so it's mostly language teachers who stop and think about all the ins and outs of a language, including all the quirks that differentiate it from other languages.
      And of course, JRR Tolkien, who is a special case all of his own, and might hold the record for the number of in-depth conlangs (constructed languages) he created. BTW, Tolkien was fascinated by the Kalevala epic of Finland, and this inspired some of his LOTR storylines.

    • @rudde7918
      @rudde7918 6 років тому +3

      Vokaalisointu kyllä opetetaan yläasteella.

    • @meri-tuuli
      @meri-tuuli 5 років тому +3

      Niitä opetellaa ala ja yläasteella

  • @ronnelvictorgelidon6334
    @ronnelvictorgelidon6334 7 років тому +17

    More video please! I really need to learn finnish. I'm applying to work in Finland and I' am required to learn finnish.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 7 років тому +6

      You take courses when you arrive. You can learn something through the web,
      But it really just becomes relevant and meaningful, when you sit at a course, talking with real people :)

    • @toukosiren9004
      @toukosiren9004 5 років тому +2

      Learned it yet? Opitko jo?

    • @chuba_
      @chuba_ 5 років тому

      "More video please! I really need to learn finnish. I'm applying to work in Finland and I'am required to learn finnish." Means
      "Lisää videoita kiltti! Minun pitää oppia suomea. Minä haen työhakemusta suomesta ja minun pitää osata suomea että pääsen sisään."

  • @memenity2044
    @memenity2044 7 років тому +1

    Very good introduction!

  • @MT-pf1pv
    @MT-pf1pv 4 роки тому +1

    The pronunciation is absolutely perfect.

  • @kurkkupastillitjalammintee
    @kurkkupastillitjalammintee 5 років тому +5

    I am Finnish and a native Finnish speaker, and actually learned a lot of new information, great work :D

  • @erika-dw1ip
    @erika-dw1ip 5 років тому +5

    how can you pronounce them so well?! you’re really good👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @berpyderpy9301
    @berpyderpy9301 4 роки тому +2

    Well done! As a finn i can say that you pronounced the words really well.

  • @lindat2224
    @lindat2224 4 роки тому +1

    I like this video so much!!! 🤩

  • @meri-tuuli
    @meri-tuuli 6 років тому +7

    Wow alot of these facts I dindt even know! Yet im a finn! Thank you

  • @Aurinkohirvi
    @Aurinkohirvi 7 років тому +4

    Favorited! Nice short review.
    About historical Carelian language area. Before Russian language spread to the area from the south, it was the home of the tribe Carelians. Novgorodians who were allied with the Carelians, gradually took parts of the Karelian land under their control starting 1100 AD, and finally ended their independence 1278 AD. After that Carelians became a tribe divided by two nations: Novgorod and Sweden, and Russian language became dominant on the Novgorodian side.

    • @hentehoo27
      @hentehoo27 7 років тому +4

      Ca. 100 years ago there were nearly 250 000 people who spoke Karelian as mother tongue. Today the number of Karelian speakers has declined to below 40 000 speakers. Same phenomenon applies to the other speakers of Uralic languages living in Russia, thanks to Russification of indigenous peoples...

    • @Aurinkohirvi
      @Aurinkohirvi 7 років тому +1

      Yeah, plenty of them moved into Finland after the Soviet-Finland wars, too. And now their children are Finns, not Karelians any more. But the people who left their country still consider themselves as Karelians.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 6 років тому +1

      Aurinkohirvi Those Karelians who moved to Finland were mostly from the area that had been Sweden or Finland for centuries, meaning that area hadn't been Russia, most of the time. From the Russian side of the Karelia, there were not so many people moving to Finland.
      So, those Karelians had been Finnish, felt themselves Finnish for generations, that didn't change in Finland. But, of course they had a different dialect, and were sometimes called Russians in the more Western Finland. But now most of their offspring have naturally dropped that dialect, wanting to assimilate.
      My Finnish roots are elsewhere, so that's not why I'm saying this. Just for the Karelians. I lived in Lahti, which got a huge Karelian population after the WWII. I grew up there in the 70's and 80's, and you couldn't hear who was from Karelia, except of the grandmothers sometimes. I heard more Savo dialect than Karelian in Lahti.
      For foreigners, Savo is the next province towards heartland Finland, when you come from Karelia in the east. Karelia is a Finnish area divided by the Russians and Swedes centuries ago. Finland would be nearly double its size, if the Karelia hadn't been divided. But what I've read from the old stories, the Karelians in the east didn't want to be Swedish, and those in the Swedish (later Finnish) didn't want to be Russian. Mainly this was because the Swedish side was Catholic and later Lutheran, the Russian side was Orthodoxe.

    • @yelsavidaravskaja905
      @yelsavidaravskaja905 5 років тому +1

      Aurinkohirvi I really dislike people that claim that Karelians are not Finnish. ”Finnish” in modern times refers to the multiple northern finnic tribes that lived in the area of Finland are now part of the same state. Modern Finns are not direct descendants of JUST the ancient ”sum” tribe, who were the tribe first called by the name ”finns.” Finns today are a mix of Tavastians, Finns, Karelians, Kvens and Izhorians. Claiming that Karelians are not Finnish is equivalent to saying that people living in Tavastia are not Finnish because they don’t live on the coast like the Sum did.

  • @inevitablethursday
    @inevitablethursday 7 років тому +1

    So well explained, even I learned something new! Language as a science has never been something I can understand, it comes intuitively or not at all. This does help me explain to myself and others how it actually works. Thank you!

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому

      Thank you for saying so! Glad to be of help!

  • @ZeusTheGooze
    @ZeusTheGooze 4 роки тому +1

    Hyvä vidi bro

  • @jazzbeau507
    @jazzbeau507 5 років тому +4

    I wish I could speak this language; the people in Finland are wonderful. I've been there many times.

  • @caroline7648
    @caroline7648 7 років тому +130

    minä en puhu soumea minä puhu routsia ja englantia I hope people who speak Finnish would under stand that

    • @oddball3095
      @oddball3095 7 років тому +40

      Ayep. I understood what you said.

    • @bertkarlsson3224
      @bertkarlsson3224 7 років тому +11

      Caroline Heiknert-Linder I'm Swedish and I think ruotsia is Swedish (Ruotsi is Sweden) and englantia is English (adjective).

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 6 років тому +3

      Bert Karlsson Thank you for your interest. In Finnish the languages have the same name as the country,
      if it isn't something like Union ... Republic ... etc. So they are not adjectives.
      The adjective for Swedish would be ruotsalainen, and that's used for persons, and things Swedish, except the language. Well, we speak languages (nouns), we don't say I speak the linguistic called English, but the language called English. Plus, compare what else we can speak, besides languages - I can speak rubbish or nonsense, even very well :)
      The ending -(t)(t)a making ruotsi to ruotsia just means it's in an object form, like the Swedish han to honom & hon to henne (English he to him & she to her) etc. Just in Finnish every word behaves like this. The endings are more regular, luckily :)

    • @matu88ma
      @matu88ma 6 років тому +8

      I'm estonian and I understand what you're saying ;)

    • @meri-tuuli
      @meri-tuuli 5 років тому

      Martin A
      Go away u Eesti

  • @aarohalme1020
    @aarohalme1020 6 років тому +1

    You did fairly well in speaking finnish. Also it was nice to see some little fact's that i didint know about the langaunge despite being finnish.

  • @fr0stlegend712
    @fr0stlegend712 4 роки тому

    That helps me so much Ty ☺️

  • @carolkahora5344
    @carolkahora5344 6 років тому +7

    this is beautiful. and my hobby being learning new languages, now this is one more added to my list.av just fallen in love with finnish.

    • @citadelofwinds1564
      @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому

      Just like JRR Tolkien did. He based much of certain elven languages of the Lord of the Rings on Finnish.

  • @mhyotyni
    @mhyotyni 7 років тому +3

    I would like to add that also some Sami languages (not only Swedish) have official status in some Finnish municipalities nowadays (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sami_languages#Finland).

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому

      Of course! But those municipalities all have a Finnish speaking majority, and are thus depicted as such on the map. Since the video focuses on Finnish, the map shows where this language is spoken by a majority/minority only :)

  • @recettezmoi
    @recettezmoi 7 років тому +1

    can't wait for a new video! I am determined to learn finnish one way or another... but it is hard to find native speakers or even materal for self study.

  • @N3k0Y0m1
    @N3k0Y0m1 3 роки тому +2

    Yes, please, I need this..

  • @Officialhelpkenet
    @Officialhelpkenet 7 років тому +22

    Det skulle vara väldigt intressant att höra om fornnordiska och isländska. Och kanske jämförelser mellan dem och svenskan. Det är väldigt intressant att höra om den gamla grammatiken, med kasus m. m.

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +5

      Jag ska lägga det förslaget på minnet!

    • @blueoceancorporations1019
      @blueoceancorporations1019 6 років тому +11

      Noniin. Nyt meillä on myös virallinen Ruotsi-Kerho täällä kommenteissa xD

    • @citadelofwinds1564
      @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому +3

      "Noniin." LOL. I have to recommend the "Noniin" video by comedian Ismo Leikola, who correctly describes it as the most important word in Finnish. It's in Finnish with English subtitles. The link is: ua-cam.com/video/HtAd78dWUlA/v-deo.html

    • @eelielomaa
      @eelielomaa 5 років тому

      I only understand word jag because i am from Finland and i have study swedish 6 months

    • @elsakristina2689
      @elsakristina2689 4 роки тому

      Och fornsvenska

  • @varokaa7133
    @varokaa7133 4 роки тому +3

    How the f*** are you this good at the Finnish language I am Finnish and this is awesome

  • @navikko4540
    @navikko4540 4 роки тому +2

    Tiedät paljon maastamme!:) hyvä viedeo

  • @Raitzu
    @Raitzu 4 роки тому +2

    Hyvä video

  • @renan6118
    @renan6118 7 років тому +24

    I love finnish language

    • @mikkokiiski2004
      @mikkokiiski2004 7 років тому

      Renan Queiroz milloin?

    • @renan6118
      @renan6118 7 років тому +1

      xD I intend until 2020 at least, I intend to try to find a master degree, job... or something like that :) To stay there a little at least.

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 6 років тому

      Obrigado!

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 6 років тому

      Mikko Kiiski Some... day
      Jonakin päivänä (for you learners)

    • @mona-yy3sz
      @mona-yy3sz 5 років тому

      Miten menee opiskelu?

  • @name_of_gods8739
    @name_of_gods8739 4 роки тому +3

    hello this is a person from finland and actually I think you sound like a Finnish person (sorry about my bad English)

  • @arwasherif1905
    @arwasherif1905 7 років тому +2

    Nice vid

  • @thecarwasherofshangri-la
    @thecarwasherofshangri-la 4 роки тому +6

    The lone word "nyyppä" is one of my favorites simply because it's such a good finn-ification of a word.
    Means newbie.

  • @ProductofWit
    @ProductofWit 6 років тому +7

    This is outside of the scope of this video. But I've read that Khanty and Mansi spoken in Siberia are a Ugric languages just like Hungarian. You sadly barely find anythinh about it online, however as they are very threatened languages.

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  6 років тому +5

      That's correct. Khanty and Mansi are the closest living relatives of Hungarian. They're both endangered and spoken east of the Ural mountains.

    • @KoteDarasuum
      @KoteDarasuum 5 років тому +1

      Urgric languages belong in Uralic languages. Thats why finnish and hungary are said to be in finno-ugric or uralic language family.

    • @Quadronnn
      @Quadronnn 5 років тому +1

      @@KoteDarasuum Personally, I just prefer to speak about the "Uralic" language family as a whole, there doesn't seem to be a more definitive consensus everyone can agree on with regard to the sub-categories under the larger family tree, so it's simpler that way. Like, Finnish and Hungarian, for example, are often grouped under the category of "Finno-Ugric" languages, but other times they're referred to as two distinct branches of their own, "Finnic" and "Ugric". And then there are the Sami languages, do they form a branch of their own of the Uralic tree along with "Finno-Ugric" and "Samoyedic"? I have no idea, so it's simpler for me to just think of the "Uralic" languages as a one big, happy family. Of course, even that isn't so simple and clear-cut (I suppose when it comes to languages, it never is.) For example, what is the relationship, if there is one, between the Uralic and the Yukaghir languages? Who knows, not me, that's for sure.

  • @TheSarat14
    @TheSarat14 7 років тому +1

    You got a new sub!

  • @piirakkapoika658
    @piirakkapoika658 4 роки тому

    Hyvää päivää

  • @kube129
    @kube129 7 років тому +31

    BTW you have a good Finnish accent.

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  7 років тому +2

      Thank you :)

    • @kube129
      @kube129 7 років тому

      Academia Cervena You are welcome

    • @aapuri2480
      @aapuri2480 7 років тому +5

      Academia Cervena Every else english speakers Can't speak finnish at all

    • @kube129
      @kube129 7 років тому

      That is right.

    • @MrAmoss
      @MrAmoss 5 років тому +1

      I was so sure that you're a native speaker@@AcademiaCervena

  • @asnek2527
    @asnek2527 5 років тому +6

    I didn't even know about vowel harmony even though i'm finnish damn

    • @Peccath
      @Peccath 5 років тому +1

      They do teach about that in primary school...

    • @asnek2527
      @asnek2527 5 років тому

      @@Peccath eh, i don't remember

    • @craftah
      @craftah 4 роки тому

      @@asnek2527 don't sleep during the lessons

  • @Erkele
    @Erkele 5 років тому +1

    good job

  • @iam_sherlocked8421
    @iam_sherlocked8421 4 роки тому

    Cool video! I'm from Finland. I live in North Karelia (more specific - Joensuu). Greetings from Finland, dude!

  • @AoiKyuuketsuki
    @AoiKyuuketsuki 7 років тому +6

    i stroked out for a sec when you showed all the 15 cases

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 6 років тому +2

      You missed his point. The cases correspond to the English prepositions.
      Make a list of them, and you'll see how many of them there are. Then that case list is not so alien :)
      And English has cases with the personal pronouns, like he (nominative) has also the forms his (genitive) & him (accusative). Just Finnish works like that with all the other pronouns, nouns, adjectives & numerals.
      But there is something that makes the case system hard to learn. Some words change when they get the case ending, I mean the stem itself, the end of the word where the case ending is attached. Then it's the nominative case (simple name case like 'he') that has changed the most, and it's often the less used cases, where the original form has remained. (in a few words it hasn't, but mostly it has). But, it's very predictable, because Finnish grammar rules are mostly sound based, kind of 'hip hop' :)

    • @timomastosalo
      @timomastosalo 6 років тому +5

      Eero Haanpää Then they are not all cases.
      They are the cases with some other things you can add even after the case ending. Like talossa (in the house/in a house), can become talossani (in my house) & talossanikin (in my house too) etc.
      Also, the plural comes before the case ending, so taloissa (in the houses/in houses) etc.
      Then we ca reach to 79 or something. But that approach is not how Finns use them. We don't learn by hart how many forms there are for one word. It's better to learn what the the sall additions mean in the end of the word, and in which order they come.
      The basic 15 cases the language learner can practise, until getting how the pattern works.
      After that, you only need to realize with a new word, which pattern it belongs to. Besides, it's more like 12 cases, the 3 last ones in the list of this video are not active, mostly. Meaning, for many words you don't need them.

    • @citadelofwinds1564
      @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому

      In practice, most of the cases are rarely used, and just three of them account for something like 3/4 of total usage in everyday use. As for the rest, they are fairly regular, and the next important group (locative cases) have related endings, so memorising the most often used case endings becomes less daunting.

  • @a.person665
    @a.person665 3 роки тому +3

    I speak finnish, and I was born in Finland, mutta mä en koskaan tiennyt oikein mitään Suomen historiasta -3- Tämä opettaa paljon uusia asioita :>

  • @sofiaparviainen1833
    @sofiaparviainen1833 4 роки тому +1

    Very good

  • @pel1tietaja
    @pel1tietaja 4 роки тому +1

    Good Job

  • @dqvolskashterka
    @dqvolskashterka 5 років тому +5

    I love that book! I've read it in Bulgarian. It's awesome to hear part of it in Finnish :)

  • @MrOgge50
    @MrOgge50 6 років тому +4

    Fact for you guys: on paper, Finland is the best country on earth, it may not have the largest economy/military but there is almost no corruption, people have high living standards, medical care, education and security is going really well too.

    • @rudde7918
      @rudde7918 6 років тому +3

      All of those good things are getting worse, sadly.

    • @meri-tuuli
      @meri-tuuli 5 років тому +1

      Rudde
      No not really

    • @Quadronnn
      @Quadronnn 5 років тому +1

      @@meri-tuuli Corruption increases year after year and the difference in that regard between Finland and other countries is getting smaller, wages remain stagnant while profits for the bosses and capitalists continue to increase, the gap between the rich and the poor is ever growing, unemployment and marginalization are huge problems that the government is trying to downplay and hide with ridiculous non-solutions. Privatization of medical care, closing of facilities providing medical care, fewer teachers teaching larger class rooms, more and more students are being forced to take out a loan to finance their studies and living instead of being granted proper financial aid, foreign powers are encroaching on Finland's sovereignity with the constant war games and military exercises, the growing desire of politicians to have Finland join NATO and have the country get swiped up in foreign wars... Just a few examples of the wrecking that's underway of this supposed "best country on Earth."

  • @yuriisyvko768
    @yuriisyvko768 5 років тому +1

    Interesting!

  • @LittleImpaler
    @LittleImpaler 4 роки тому

    I am so glad he talked about top landform. I was wondering what that was.

  • @nakkilama2645
    @nakkilama2645 4 роки тому +10

    wait what you're swedish??? you literally have no accent at all (by that i mean you sound like a native english speaker lol). also your finnish is almost perfect, but the accent just makes it funnier to hear, it sounds really cute :D

    • @craftah
      @craftah 4 роки тому

      He doesnt sound like a native english speaker

    • @craftah
      @craftah 4 роки тому

      The way he said dog sounds like dahg

    • @nakkilama2645
      @nakkilama2645 3 роки тому

      @@aliceberethart that's cool!! it's the same here, since swedish and finnish are both official languages here. we see swedish everywhere and it's cool, it's easy for us to learn eachother's languages :D

  • @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja
    @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja 5 років тому +16

    It sound like you spent some time learning to pronounce Finnish.

  • @escdarkside
    @escdarkside 5 років тому +1

    Pronounciation on point!!! 👌

  • @pakkunen8491
    @pakkunen8491 4 роки тому

    Im very VERY late. But still this is so good video! You maked very good job on this!

  • @FakeXyxy
    @FakeXyxy 4 роки тому +12

    Finland is easy, go to Square and Scream "SUOMI PERKELE!"

  • @SocialistFinn1
    @SocialistFinn1 6 років тому +7

    Kinda sad to see how Finnish is decreasing outside Finland, how come Swedish isn't decreasing in Finland?

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  6 років тому +10

      The share of Swedish speakers in Finland has been steadily decreasing for over 100 years.

    • @SocialistFinn1
      @SocialistFinn1 6 років тому +1

      Academia Cervena, I know but hasn't it stayed steady at around 5% in recent years? Of course a hundred years ago it was like 12% and before that I think it was up to 20-30% but in recent years has it also decreased?

    • @AcademiaCervena
      @AcademiaCervena  6 років тому +2

      I believe it has been more stable since the turn of the milennium. In absolute numbers the number of Swedish speakers has stopped decreasing, but the share has still decreased, although at a slower pace than before (5,9% in 1990; 5,3% in 2016).
      But a continued decrease can be seen in other ways. For example the share of Swedish speakers in the Uusimaa province fell from 11,3% in 1990 to 8,1% in 2016. Granted, the share of Finnish speakers in the same region fell from 87,6 to 79,9% in the same time, but since immigrants in this region tend to adopt Finnish as their second language, the "market share" of Finnish will not be hurt, while as for Swedish, it will.

    • @SocialistFinn1
      @SocialistFinn1 6 років тому +2

      Academia Cervena, yeah I guess that's true. Also, weird how in Uusimaa, Finnish is only spoken by about 3/4, I guess that's what immigration does.

    • @citadelofwinds1564
      @citadelofwinds1564 6 років тому +3

      Swedish in Finland has decreased quite a bit. About 100 years ago, an estimated 20% spoke Swedish as their first language, but these days it's more like 5%. Also, it's largely confined to very small areas, mostly coastal, and of course the Swedish-speaking Åland Islands, so outside these areas you would find very few native Swedish speakers to carry on the language to the next generations.

  • @HelsinkiPink
    @HelsinkiPink 6 місяців тому

    I really like how it sounds.

  • @jyrkilehtinen9886
    @jyrkilehtinen9886 4 роки тому +2

    This was a very high quality lecture. Essential things were presented.

  • @ristusnotta1653
    @ristusnotta1653 5 років тому +28

    Yeah good luck trying to learn our language 😂

    • @Ollebolle112
      @Ollebolle112 3 роки тому +5

      It sounds beautyful, but it looks like keyboard smash

    • @zheniaryona8659
      @zheniaryona8659 3 роки тому

      @@Ollebolle112 lmao