Aura's Finnish Lesson 1: Pronunciation

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  • Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
  • My website: aurasfinnishle...
    Learn Finnish Language part 1: Pronunciation
    In the video I go through the basics of pronouncing Finnish and go through the alphabet.
    More videos on the way :)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 120

  • @Jezyra
    @Jezyra 7 років тому +41

    This video was the most helpful video I've seen thus far. Finnish is such a cute and pretty language. Thanks for this!

  • @KenMoss
    @KenMoss 6 років тому +16

    I have had many lessons in Finnish and I struggle to learn. You are the absolutely the best and describe lessons perfectly. Kiitos paljon.

  • @ecengungor
    @ecengungor 4 роки тому +5

    Okay, i am Turkish and i can easily say that sounds and pronounciation is freakishly similar to my language. I didn’t have any trouble to say these at all and it was so fun!

  • @Ava-cy6qw
    @Ava-cy6qw 7 років тому +22

    Fantastic approach to learning. Thumbs up. Kiitos.

  • @niklotzveligradu2522
    @niklotzveligradu2522 7 років тому +9

    A lesson that was very clear and easy to follow, thank you for this!

  • @eliz_scubavn
    @eliz_scubavn 4 роки тому +5

    Just started Duolingo Finnish. This is great!

  • @timothythefinn5005
    @timothythefinn5005 7 років тому +2

    I'm a native Finnish speaker and enjoying your lessons as well, and am learning from you :)

  • @greek4you383
    @greek4you383 5 років тому +3

    The way you explain grammar is unique. Congratulations indeed!

  • @iMacxXuserXx485
    @iMacxXuserXx485 5 років тому +32

    Isn't it interesting that Finnish and Japanese do the same thing where they elongate for double vowels /consonants? But they are not from the same language family.

    • @permafrost8894
      @permafrost8894 4 роки тому +6

      there is a hypothesis that includes Japanese to the Altaic language family which was also considered to be related to the Uralic languages. *Altaic language family, generally Mongolic, Turkic, Tunguisic, sometimes Korean, sometimes Japanese.

    • @aryamanrajaputra9753
      @aryamanrajaputra9753 3 роки тому +4

      @@permafrost8894 but altaic is extremely discredited and many people (including myself) do not believe it to be real

    • @aryamanrajaputra9753
      @aryamanrajaputra9753 3 роки тому

      @Jacob Houston who gives a fuck tho

    • @singleturbosupra7951
      @singleturbosupra7951 3 роки тому

      @@permafrost8894 I don't think the Uralic-Altaic family hypothesis is correct, as doesn't many others. But I some times think there may be a chance that some parts of what makes the Finnish language and Japanese language may have evolved together. I'm not very knowledgeable on how genetics works, but on wikipedia at least it is said that part of the genetics that exist in all Uralic peoples orignated in areas of modern northern China about 20,000 years ago. So I think it could be likely those people were in some kind of contact with the ancestors of modern Japanese. And seeing that Proto-Uralic speakers most likely lived around Ural mountains and moving towards west, it may be that those people were a continuation of people very long ago living closer to eastern asia.
      This is just my thoughts as an armchair historian who is very interested in pre-history, so take this comment with heavy grain of salt. I have no evidence to proof what I have rambled here.

  • @K-DRAMALOVER07
    @K-DRAMALOVER07 Місяць тому

    I've been looking for this finally got you.Thank you.

  • @hartree.y
    @hartree.y Рік тому +1

    Press "3" repeatedly for the sound a game character makes when bumping into a wall

  • @tommytowner792
    @tommytowner792 4 роки тому +2

    consonants l, t, r can be in the end too, not just n. Kyynel, kyyneleet, manner etc.

  • @michaellewis5218
    @michaellewis5218 4 роки тому +1

    Amazing video. Took so long to find a helpful one, thank you!

  • @Joan-nr9we
    @Joan-nr9we 6 років тому +1

    I just started learning Finnish. thanks for this lesson.

  • @hartree.y
    @hartree.y Рік тому

    "Aja hiljaa sillalla" is something you would hear in a nursery rhyme. Really fun language!

  • @crazyconfenenationconforme2253
    @crazyconfenenationconforme2253 7 років тому +4

    I am learning Japanese in Saturday school and Japanese has diphthongs, lots of the some of them include あい、あう、おい、うえ。When romanized they are ai,au,oi,ue.

    • @10qwe10
      @10qwe10 7 років тому +2

      I don't think you fully understand what Diphthong is because she was right Japanese language doesn't have them.

    • @iMacxXuserXx485
      @iMacxXuserXx485 5 років тому +1

      In Japanese ai means you pronounce the a and then the i. Same with all the others you listed.

    • @fritz_von_steiner5544
      @fritz_von_steiner5544 4 роки тому +2

      What else is あい (ai) - if not a diphthong? Two Vowels? In Finnish, one says `A-I´ and in Japanese it´s also `A-I´! In both languages they are spelled separately after each other! In Greek e.g. you have diphthongs which are spelled like one vowel - e.g. a+i `αι´ which is pronounced only as the `a´ in cat! So, what is a diphthong?

    • @Pyovali
      @Pyovali 3 роки тому +1

      @@fritz_von_steiner5544 You should Google that. There's a difference. Japanese doesn't have syllables in theory either. It's a morae based language.

    • @fritz_von_steiner5544
      @fritz_von_steiner5544 3 роки тому

      @@Pyovali Japanese DOES have syllables! Their syllables consist of consonants + vowels! You do know what consonants are? And you know what vowels are? Then put them together and you will get all the possible Japanese syllables! They are called `Hiragana´! And phonetically they ARE SYLLABLES!!!

  • @user-zy5kk6wg9s
    @user-zy5kk6wg9s 2 роки тому

    It's a really rare&happy moment to read other languages like Japanese! :)

  • @pamlp04
    @pamlp04 3 роки тому +2

    I speak english and spanish, and the finnish pronuciation has some similar things with spanish. I'm quite surprised.

  • @curtpiazza1688
    @curtpiazza1688 Рік тому

    Great introductory lesson ...thanks!

  • @NjokuNwaugo
    @NjokuNwaugo 3 місяці тому

    Thank you so so much, I have learnt.

  • @mielipidevanki3958
    @mielipidevanki3958 4 роки тому +3

    The letter Z pronunciation is almost every time /tʃ/, /ts/, /tɕ/ or /dʒ/ or something between those. Very rare finn pronounces it like zzzzzzz (voiced s /z/).

    • @thereisnorighteousperson1049
      @thereisnorighteousperson1049 4 роки тому

      Mitähän noilla merkeille yritit sanoa ei tullu oikeen selväksi 😂😂 ja muuten z on monissa muissa kielissä kuten englannissa ihan eri asia kun suomen z

    • @mielipidevanki3958
      @mielipidevanki3958 4 роки тому +1

      @@thereisnorighteousperson1049 ne ovat kansainvälisen foneettisen aakkoston merkkejä, äännemerkkejä, yksi sellainen vastaa yhtä äännettä (olet varmasti nähnyt näitä esim englannin kirjassa: ʃ ʒ θ ð ŋ ɑ ʊ ə ɪ

  • @michaelrees350
    @michaelrees350 7 років тому +58

    "forigin origin" XD

  • @jeffreywattles3595
    @jeffreywattles3595 5 років тому

    Thorough and very clear. Thank you.

  • @misiddiai
    @misiddiai 4 роки тому +3

    Hello, I've just stumbled across your video by accident, as I'm not learning Finnish, but have a fascination with languages in general.
    Just wanted to say that it's kinda weird that, although finnish pronunciation is supposed to be "plain and simple", with little to no variation, when speaking english you very often tend to mispronounce simple letters (or apparently so) such as "v" (you say wowels instead of vowels). It strikes me as a weird inconsistency, since I'd expect you to struggle more with vowels than with consonants. Also, 9 times out of 10 you say "finniss" instead of finnish, which is incredibly cute, but makes very little sense 😅
    Anyway, thanks a lot for teaching us! Don't let small countries' (population) languages die out! It'd be a terrible loss!!! ❤️

    • @untitled6578
      @untitled6578 8 місяців тому +1

      Finnish doesn't contrast between v and w, or between s and sh, which would explain why she struggled with these in English (other difficult pairs are p/b, k/g, ch/j). As for why specifically she said "wowels" even though the letter v is only rarely pronounced as w in Finnish - it could be either hypercorrection for the foreign w consonant, or it could be a coarticulation thing - e.g. when I am speaking Finnish, if I were to enounter the word "kyykkyyn", I would keep my lips rounded throughout the pronunciation of the entire word as in Finnish it's more important to get the vowels spot on than to prevent slight adjustments to the consonants. She may be using this same coarticulation pattern in English causing her to unintentionally convert her Vs to Ws.

    • @misiddiai
      @misiddiai 8 місяців тому +1

      @@untitled6578 Woah, such an interesting and complex explanation! Wasn't expecting that much! Thank you very much for taking the time to reply 😊

  • @anikapage8324
    @anikapage8324 8 років тому +3

    This is excellent.

  • @talkshowhost5989
    @talkshowhost5989 7 років тому +13

    Your accent is very funny, but nevertheless your video has helped me pronounce Finnish greatly :)

  • @ellevehaler1758
    @ellevehaler1758 2 роки тому +1

    May I ask what is the tongue’s position when pronouncing “L”?
    Finnish L sounds very distinct, it sounds like a Russian L to my ears sometimes (the tongue is between teeth).

  • @spell666hell
    @spell666hell 5 років тому +11

    La pronunciación es muy similar al español

    • @Noctem0wl
      @Noctem0wl 3 роки тому

      Eso estaba pensando yo!

  • @user-oc4ep9iz3q
    @user-oc4ep9iz3q 7 років тому +1

    very useful video thank you .
    continue it

  • @learnalanguagewithleslie
    @learnalanguagewithleslie 2 роки тому

    Thanks!

  • @EtArcadiaego
    @EtArcadiaego 8 років тому +1

    interesting the comparison between finnish and japanese.. always similar customs

  • @SammyNeverEver
    @SammyNeverEver 5 років тому +6

    It seems that if you speak Spanish natively, you have a headstart on Finnish pronunciation. RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

  • @jrh_transformativesolutions
    @jrh_transformativesolutions 8 місяців тому

    Useful video

  • @suguaakini4478
    @suguaakini4478 3 роки тому +1

    "Finnish R is very hard to pronounce even for Fins"
    Me, a French native : RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

  • @Ubylosthispants
    @Ubylosthispants 8 років тому

    Thank you very much, this is most helpful.

  • @pumpulipuikko988
    @pumpulipuikko988 5 років тому +2

    You can hear a lot of diphthongs in colloquial Japanese though.

  • @simovihinen875
    @simovihinen875 6 років тому +1

    The word she's using is actually "foreigins", that is those of foreign origin. Examples of use:
    "Hey, are you foreigin?"
    "My mom is foreigin."
    "I can't stand those foreigins!"
    BTW: There are some factual inaccuracies, like saying "Japanese doesn't have dipthtongs" when it really does have similar kinds of vowel combinations, just not in the same syllable/mori (except if you count "kyo" etc.) Heeee? Doesn't matter in terms of learning what you came here for though.

  • @villagepope7661
    @villagepope7661 7 років тому +1

    You've got some interesting videos. I have a question though... I've noticed this a lot in Finnish... Why do you pronounce some esses as "s" and others as "sh", like the word "roska" you pronounced "roshka", while "rösti" you pronounced the way it's written? Is there a rule to that or is it just haphazard?

    • @aurasfinnishlessons7626
      @aurasfinnishlessons7626  7 років тому +2

      Thanks for pointing that put! Officially, Finnish has only one 's', but it might sometimes sound different depending on the dialect of the speaker or the letters surrounding the 's'. In the word 'roska', it is easier to say 'sh' than 's', because of the hard 'r' sound. It just rolls more naturally for a native speaker. There is no official difference, though.

    • @villagepope7661
      @villagepope7661 7 років тому +2

      Thanks. Ok, makes sense. So it's not actually official but would it sound wrong to pronounce it differently then (regardless of dialects)?

    • @aurasfinnishlessons7626
      @aurasfinnishlessons7626  7 років тому

      You will be understood either way :)

    • @villagepope7661
      @villagepope7661 7 років тому +2

      Thanks. Sure, the most important thing is to be understood, perfection comes with time :)

    • @aleksinuutila2315
      @aleksinuutila2315 6 років тому +1

      village pope
      In principle every letter, with only a few exceptions, is pronounced the same no matter what. But thats not the complete truth.
      Very often the same letter has slighty different pronouncuation in different words, but thats not on purpose. The reason for these differences is that the sounds blend with neigbouring sounds. Maybe the best way to think why this happens is to think that the tongue is "cutting corners" or being lazy, one sound may partially change to resemble the next in some way, in order to make the transition between the two easier fot the tongue.
      I have never before noticed that roska is more like "roshka", but I think that the s sounds like sh, because the part of the tongue that pronounces 'k' is already preparing for the k. You can get rid of this by trying to say roseka instead of roska.

  • @kalawatieroop2616
    @kalawatieroop2616 4 роки тому

    Such a cute and pretty language ,thank u sooo muvh for thisvedio.

  • @RoyTelling
    @RoyTelling 7 років тому +6

    Kiitos I have been looking for good video for learning soumi as I live in Jyväskylä and want a Soumi passport :)

    • @hakimbenjelloun9749
      @hakimbenjelloun9749 7 років тому

      Roy Telling
      where are you from ?

    • @bror8228
      @bror8228 5 років тому +1

      There is no country called Soumi, did you mean Suomi...

  • @alexandruchiriac2179
    @alexandruchiriac2179 6 років тому +3

    5:58 forigin origin:)))

  • @gabrielablancas9389
    @gabrielablancas9389 5 років тому

    Gracias por su información

  • @peterk.6093
    @peterk.6093 3 роки тому

    Great explanation, thanks. I only missed the rule on pronouncing the "c". When is is "ts" and when "k"? Is it like ka ko ku tse tsi system, like in Latin?

    • @Pyovali
      @Pyovali 3 роки тому +2

      It goes like how the foreign word goes. Finnish doesn't use C otherwise at all.

    • @peterk.6093
      @peterk.6093 3 роки тому

      @@Pyovali Thanks, that simplifies things somehow.

  • @FlavourlessLife
    @FlavourlessLife 5 років тому +9

    Finnish people sound like they're dancing with their mouth.

  • @indujamj4710
    @indujamj4710 7 років тому

    your videos are great!

  • @ilonapeck7022
    @ilonapeck7022 Рік тому

    In Finnish 'n' doesn't make a syllable by itself, like in Japanese. For example: minun (my or mine), syllables are: mi-nun. In Japanese the final 'n' is a syllable by itself, but never in Finnish.

  • @bre232
    @bre232 2 роки тому

    Kiitos

  • @umukhaalid2957
    @umukhaalid2957 5 років тому

    Aura! Kiitos paljon
    Mä Kiinnostaa.

  • @1400740
    @1400740 8 років тому

    Great lesson. Kiitos!

  • @l8nni
    @l8nni 2 роки тому +1

    3:12 I am German, nothing is difficult for me ;)

  • @subhasharma4425
    @subhasharma4425 4 роки тому +1

    I wish i had a finnish frriend to talk to

    • @kftspss
      @kftspss 4 роки тому

      same. If you're currently learning too, we could talk/text if you want to!

  • @user-he9cb2fm6b
    @user-he9cb2fm6b Рік тому +2

    Well get to fluent level one day guys.

  • @geraldkabamba
    @geraldkabamba 2 роки тому

    Kiitos paljon

  • @user-os4ep9vl9v
    @user-os4ep9vl9v 4 роки тому

    Y = ы Am I right ? But I'm not actually russian

  • @thereisnorighteousperson1049
    @thereisnorighteousperson1049 4 роки тому +1

    "Finnish is always accentless" does not make any sence becouse finnish accent is to put the emphasis to the first syllape and that is accent itself

  • @haydnforisz4459
    @haydnforisz4459 7 років тому

    hyvin kiva!

  • @paypigdonatedonate
    @paypigdonatedonate 3 роки тому

    I don’t even want to learn Finnish but her voice is so cute I can’t bring myself to not listen 😭

  • @Kolya_Volkov
    @Kolya_Volkov 4 роки тому

    Any finnish could translate this into english? Kiitos
    Eilinen
    :
    kaikki huoleni vei tyhjyyteen
    tänään sain taas harmit tunnen sen
    mut silti uskon eiliseen

    Huolet vaan
    tältä elämältä joskus saan
    Tahdon kaiken onnen kokonaan
    siis saavu mennyt uudestaan

    Pois kun
    häivyit
    tiedän mä jälleen totuuden
    Koskaan
    mulle ei enää saavu
    eilinen

    Rakkauden
    eilen luonani mä pitää sain
    nyt vain pakopaikan tarvitsen
    kun turhaan sua mä tänään hain

    Pois kun
    häivyit
    tiedän mä jälleen totuuden
    Koskaan
    mulle ei enää saavu
    eilinen

    Eilinen
    kaikki huoleni vei tyhjyyteen
    tänään sain taas harmit tunnen sen
    mut silti uskon eiliseen

  • @kurapan_clips
    @kurapan_clips 4 роки тому

    All syllables have a vowel and the only exception is 'n'.
    Is Finnish language a cousin if Japanese? lol

    • @Pyovali
      @Pyovali 4 роки тому

      No

    • @singleturbosupra7951
      @singleturbosupra7951 3 роки тому

      @@Pyovali Hey, you said on another comment that you are a linquist. Do you think there's any merit to my thoughts about possible (thin) relation between the origins of Finnish and Japanese? I posted this on another comment and I'm copying it here:
      "I some times think there may be a chance that some parts of what makes the Finnish language and Japanese language may have evolved together. I'm not very knowledgeable on how genetics works, but on wikipedia at least it is said that part of the genetics that exist in all Uralic peoples orignated in areas of modern northern China about 20,000 years ago. So I think it could be likely those people were in some kind of contact with the ancestors of modern Japanese. And seeing that Proto-Uralic speakers most likely lived around Ural mountains and moving towards west, it may be that those people were a continuation of people very long ago living closer to eastern asia.
      This is just my thoughts as an armchair historian who is very interested in pre-history, so take this comment with heavy grain of salt. I have no evidence to proof what I have rambled here."
      Like I said, those are just evidenceless thoughts I've been thinking about recently. Would like to hear some opinions of people who actually know about stuff like linquists and/or genetics. Just to make it more clear, I'm not necessarily saying there is some common Proto language between Finnish and Japanese, just that some very old Proto languages of the two might have evolved close to each other and loaning things between each other.

    • @Pyovali
      @Pyovali 3 роки тому

      @@singleturbosupra7951 Only way I can think of any relation is the migration to Asia where the people split to different paths, but we do not have any written evidence of the languages spoken around 25.000BC.
      27.000 years is a really really long time for languages to develop, so if there was relation, it would be some proto-proto-proto language, that wouldn't look anything like the languages we hear today. Languages without standardization can mutate really really fast. Dyirbal language of Autralia is a great example where a language changed so much only in decades they had to make a distinction between new language and old language!

  • @itsminja4273
    @itsminja4273 3 роки тому +1

    Oon suomalainen mut opettelen uudelleen kielen jota puhun joka päivä😂

  • @haydentaylor5250
    @haydentaylor5250 6 років тому +2

    forigin origin

  • @mayclark3659
    @mayclark3659 6 років тому

    ok... watch it first time....and... time to watch it second time.... -_-

  • @broytingaravsol
    @broytingaravsol 6 років тому

    could this speaker speak japanese?

    • @vape9319
      @vape9319 6 років тому +1

      When it comes to pronounciation, then it's pretty much yes, but there are some exceptions like the way finnish pronounce "j" and how japanese pronounce it. Only problem is the finnish accent which doesn't match at all when compared to japanese accent

  • @smittywerbenjagermanjensenn
    @smittywerbenjagermanjensenn 6 років тому

    wowels

  • @agrippinafofanova4891
    @agrippinafofanova4891 4 роки тому +1

    This language is so weird. I doubt if I could learn it...

  • @shermancaruthers7667
    @shermancaruthers7667 4 роки тому

    i think we have the same name lol

  • @paulostube998
    @paulostube998 Рік тому

    kitos

  • @ilonapeck7022
    @ilonapeck7022 Рік тому

    These are the diphthongs of Finnish: ai, ei, oi, ui, yi, äi, öi, au, eu, iu, ou, äy, öy, iy, ey , ie, uo, yö.
    So, 'eo' or 'ae' are not Finnish diphthongs.

  • @philbertmill2
    @philbertmill2 7 років тому +1

    I am confused with J, its sounds just like "i" to me 7:20

    • @venla4691
      @venla4691 7 років тому +4

      philbertmill2 J sounds like the letter Y in yellow

    • @arijarmala2037
      @arijarmala2037 4 роки тому

      Jes, it is jellou.

  • @PaulVinonaama
    @PaulVinonaama 6 років тому +1

    There is no eo diphtong in Finnish.

    • @uljasviljakainen2172
      @uljasviljakainen2172 6 років тому +3

      Keko keossa keosta kekoon Teko teon teonsana

    • @koukkula5
      @koukkula5 4 роки тому +2

      @@uljasviljakainen2172 Noissa antamissasi esimerkkisanoissa e ja o kuuluvat eri tavuihin, joten ne eivät muodosta diftongia.

  • @ianker-lindee9539
    @ianker-lindee9539 7 років тому +1

    Aura are you single

  • @hakimbenjelloun9749
    @hakimbenjelloun9749 7 років тому

    Not very clear your explanations .. and difficult language

  • @baldinib1055
    @baldinib1055 6 років тому

    Yawn

  • @bror8228
    @bror8228 5 років тому

    Pronunciation...? Did you mean pronounciation? ...You are not the only one, even native english speakers have no idea... that´s embarrassing...

    • @AL-sm8ww
      @AL-sm8ww 5 років тому +3

      Bror its spelt pronunciation lol

    • @peketee2278
      @peketee2278 4 роки тому

      Pronounciation=uttalet Pronunciation=Uttal

  • @danielrodriguezperez8655
    @danielrodriguezperez8655 5 років тому

    Kiitos