Meals of the Day in Finnish 😋

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  • Опубліковано 30 тра 2024
  • In this video lesson, we will learn the meals of the day in Finnish!
    Summary:
    - ateria = meal
    - aamupala = breakfast (aamiainen)
    - lounas = lunch
    - välipala = snack
    - kahvitauko = coffee break
    - päivällinen = dinner
    - illallinen = dinner (later in the day, fancier, usually includes courses)
    - iltapala = evening snackl
    _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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    ▫️ c h a p t e r s ▫️
    0:00-0:15 Intro
    0:16-1:27 Aamupala
    1:28-2:40 Lounas
    2:41-3:41 Välipala
    3:42-4:32 Kahvitauko
    4:33-6:08 Päivällinen
    6:09-6:28 Sentences
    6:29-8:09 Illallinen
    8:10-9:18 Iltapala
    9:19-9:41 Outro
    _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
    Thank you for watching!
    ♥ KatChats ♥

КОМЕНТАРІ • 56

  • @KatChatsFinnish
    @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому +15

    For breakfast you can also use the word "aamiainen" by the way :)

    • @marin_1441
      @marin_1441 Рік тому

      And what is the difference between aamupala and aamiainen?(Eating breakfast after 11 am but not lunch?)

    • @KatChats.
      @KatChats. Рік тому +1

      @@marin_1441 No difference!

    • @judithdecoration5633
      @judithdecoration5633 9 місяців тому

      can you do blog about recipe how to cook fish, rice khavia

    • @user-xj2lt9xg9p
      @user-xj2lt9xg9p 8 місяців тому

      kiitos paljon..

  • @phoebebaker1575
    @phoebebaker1575 Рік тому +1

    Wonderful! I appreciate how you repeat the words. “Repetition is the key to learning.”

  • @user-wm4kv7he9n
    @user-wm4kv7he9n Рік тому +3

    Kat!!! I learned Finnish well today. I always support you. Have a happy weekend.😊😇💪🫶

  • @my.lionart
    @my.lionart Рік тому +3

    In German, breakfast is "Frühstück" which literally translates to "early piece". It's interesting that both German and Finnish have the "piece" included in their breakfast :)
    Oh and in Germany, we usually have lunch at around 1 pm I'd say. In hospitals or also when you're with elder people it's usually already at 12. But it truly varies. Sometimes, it's even later than 1 pm (during holidays, my family usually has lunch at 2 pm). But I'd be interested what other people from Germany would say because I believe it also depends on where you live in Germany.

    • @KatChatsFinnish
      @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому +2

      Oh what an interesting similarity! And yes, I agree that would be interesting too!

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Рік тому +1

      I'm an American who spent one summer attending school in Salzburg. All the students in my class lived with a host family, but the host "family" I lived with consisted of a single widowed lady. I would eat breakfast with her, go to school, eat lunch at a restaurant, and return in the evening to eat the final meal of the day with her. I can't remember exactly what time it was when we ate dinner--but it had to be at least 17:00, if not later. (It got dark at 22:00, which blew me away as it gets dark earlier than that where I live in the USA. I seem to recall eating dinner as it was getting dark--at least sometimes.) On weekdays, she served me a big meal in the evenings. On the weekends, when I didn't attend school, the big meal of the day was at midday, more or less--maybe 13:00 or 14:00--and the evening meal consisted of cold cuts and cheeses. I guess that's the traditional German/Austrian way of doing things, isn't it?

    • @l8nni
      @l8nni Рік тому

      I am from the northern part of Germany and I agree with all of what you said. On working days we mostly eat at 12-1 am, on the weekends or holidays it is around 1-2 pm. Same rule for päivällinen. 7 pm on working days and maybe 7-8 pm on Saturday

    • @marcbungart4484
      @marcbungart4484 Рік тому

      I‘m from western Germany and it’s the same here.

  • @larrylamere1829
    @larrylamere1829 7 місяців тому

    Hi Kat, just a note for english speakers päivällinen = supper to sup also at least here in Michigan USA supper is often a one plate meal, illallinen = dinner to dine usually a meal of more than three courses.

  • @berkeleysando
    @berkeleysando Рік тому +2

    Your videos are so helpful thank you ❤

  • @ExitiumNL
    @ExitiumNL Рік тому +1

    Dutchy here! Lounasaika is usually around 12:00 - 13:00 here, although for me it's often around 14:00 - 15:00. Päivällinen is usually 17:00 - 18:30 here as well, although younger generations tend to eat a bit later than older generations. For me it's quite a bit later (which is why I eat lunch later as well), usually around 20:00 - 21:00. (but eating later than that is not uncommon either)

  • @rachelmanyathi7372
    @rachelmanyathi7372 Рік тому

    Would be cool if you could have a continuous video of this about Finnish cultural foods and the season that is usually consumed. Thank you.

  • @bufordghoons9981
    @bufordghoons9981 Рік тому

    American here, as American as granola, and my brain looks like it in the morning. I' usually have lounasaika around 12:15 PM - 12:45 PM. I spread my arms like a vulture and descend upon the kitchen eating anything in sight, then I fly away (not literally, of course) and repeat this action around 6 PM for päivällinen.
    Sometimes for iltapala I'll have some peanut butter crackers with milk or some Havarti cheese (Finnish version of this cheese is good) along with a thin slice of bread.

  • @othman.ldd7
    @othman.ldd7 Рік тому

    thanks a lot :)

  • @FedericoBorluzzi
    @FedericoBorluzzi Рік тому

    What a yummy idea for your new video! ;)

  • @kieraniles688
    @kieraniles688 Рік тому

    It would be good to know how this "-llinen" ending gets added to words. Is it like the case ending -alla/-ällä + -nen? "Paikallinen" seems to be the same construction.

  • @heyymari_
    @heyymari_ Рік тому

    Soo in the U.S. I agree with an earlier comment about breakfast, since the average work day is from 9am - 5pm, it could start as early as 6am to some people but I would say usually 7-8am , lunch peak time also from 11am-12pm and dinner, personally would be anywhere from 7-9pm. Differs from person to person.

  • @sureshingle8023
    @sureshingle8023 Рік тому

    Hii ... good morning Kat i am from Mumbai... good teaching Finnish.... thanks

  • @mayyasycheva9391
    @mayyasycheva9391 Рік тому

    Kate, a lot of thanks for your great work and so high-professional teaching skills!!! 🤗🌷💞

    • @KatChatsFinnish
      @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому

      Oh thank you so much for the kind comment ☺️ Kiitos!

  •  Рік тому +1

    Hello and thanks for your Video. In Germany breakfast time mostly depends on the beginning of working time. Sundays many people have a brunch especially when they meet friends. Is there a finnish word for brunch?

  • @DiemNguyen-rk1vu
    @DiemNguyen-rk1vu Рік тому +1

    I am surprised that this video has many subtitles, even more surprised when one of them is my mother tongue - Vietnamese. Thanks Kat

    • @KatChatsFinnish
      @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому +1

      They are translated from the English subtitles I made haha but hope they are somewhat understandable xD

  • @merclangrat
    @merclangrat Рік тому

    Moi Kat! Glad to see you :) you have a nice sweatshirt with Sid 😍
    Actually the Soviet/postSoviet work/office culture is to have lounas at 12 (lunch break in offices), and dinner at 6-7 pm when people come home.
    In my country Uzbekistan, if we take more traditional, that may be interesting because it's up to +47 in summer. I don't know exactly, but I know that people usually eat aamupala at 6-7am and it's quite big, and lunch is quite early too, before it gets too hot.
    During the day people stay at homes or at tea places called "choykhona" (literally: tea room) inside or in the shade, having green tea and light dishes for hot days which we can call "day snacks".
    Dinner is usually when it's get darker and cooler, it's in summer after 8pm (days are shorter in southern countries, usually you have white nights in Finland those days)
    Minä olen yökyöpeli! minä syön aamupalaa kello 11 ja lounasta kello 14-15. Päivällinen on kello 19-20 ja... paljon iltapalaa!

    • @merclangrat
      @merclangrat Рік тому

      I am trying to translate: "Uzbekilaiset juovat vihreää teeta teehuoneessa varjossa kun on tosi kuumaa"

    • @merclangrat
      @merclangrat Рік тому

      Ah! I should have said in plural, "teehuoneissa". cases in plural are still not easy for me!

  • @rutnoemichamie2035
    @rutnoemichamie2035 Рік тому

    In Argentina we have dinner quite late, usually at 21.00 or 22.00, or even later during friends or family meetings. Lunch depends on each person's schedule, I suppose, but I'd say that lunch time is around 12.30-13.00. Some people have lunch later because they finish work later. And then we have our merienda (snack time) between 16 and 18, again depending on people's schedule. I have one at 16.30 when I come from school and then at 19 again because I'm always hungry. I have lunch at 12 or even at 11.30 the days I have to go to school earlier to watch the kids during lunch break. So I have an excuse for multiple snack times. 😅
    When I went on holidays to Finland, my fiancé and I found it impossible to adjust to Finnish dining time. At 18 we were having a big ice cream somewhere, and we showed up at restaurants at 21. Nobody in the restaurant was eating at that time; the other customers were just having drinks. I guess we were obvious tourists. If I had to have dinner at 18, I wouldn't need some iltapala, but rather dinner round 2. 🤣

    • @KatChatsFinnish
      @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому

      Wow double dinner! How interesting, eating that late in the evening is so different to Finland wow!

  • @JonelFr-rr7lm
    @JonelFr-rr7lm Рік тому

    Kiitos hyvä ope :)

  • @InamullahKhan-nc9wx
    @InamullahKhan-nc9wx 5 місяців тому

    Great I have learn Finnish litell😅

  • @johnfloyd9288
    @johnfloyd9288 Рік тому

    Jee!

  • @user-eq4iz6fg8v
    @user-eq4iz6fg8v 7 місяців тому

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @ym7977
    @ym7977 Рік тому

    7:06 😂 this part made me laugh

  • @abbymariano9869
    @abbymariano9869 Рік тому

    does kahvitauko and päivakahvin, means the same?

    • @KatChatsFinnish
      @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому

      Yeah I would say it's similar, although päiväkahvi doesn't necessarily mean you are taking a break from work - it can just be some coffee in the middle of the day :)

  • @agnishom
    @agnishom Рік тому +5

    You missed second breakfast, which is very important for Finnish Hobbits

  • @luciazoccante9647
    @luciazoccante9647 Рік тому

    I try to say it in Finnish. Syön lounas kello 12 ja päivällinen kello 19

  • @apichayapompom9127
    @apichayapompom9127 9 місяців тому

    thank you for a good video but better if no English word during you spoke , because i can't see well the finnish word. it look like 2D.

  • @Toni-yn1kn
    @Toni-yn1kn Рік тому

    My lovely teacher))💐💐💐

  • @bigscarysteve
    @bigscarysteve Рік тому +1

    In the USA, it's sort of ingrained that the work day is from 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M., so the meal times are based on that. Breakfast doesn't have a set time in my mind--it would depend on how early you get up, I guess--but lunch is supposed to be at 12:00 noon and dinner is supposed to be at 6:00 P.M. In reality, of course, not everyone works 9-5, so mealtimes don't always conform to the cultural expectation.
    As for the English names for meals, I grew up with breakfast, lunch, and dinner--but my parents called the meals breakfast, dinner, and supper. An echo of this is retained in the religious term "the Last Supper"--nobody would call it the "last dinner," even if they don't use the word "supper" at all otherwise. My parents would always get mad at me for mislabeling two of the meals of the day. I guess the change occurred in the 1960's. I used to see the word for lunch written as "luncheon" back then--but I never heard anyone say "luncheon"--and I mean that so absolutely that I'm not even sure how the word is supposed to be pronounced.
    I always wondered why the British had tea time at 4:00 P.M. That always struck me as too soon between lunch and dinner. Then I researched it, and I found out that back in the days when tea time was invented, there was no such thing as lunch--at least not in the UK. You only got two meals a day back then--so tea time was the invention of a third meal for the day.

    • @KatChatsFinnish
      @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому

      Lots of fun facts I hadn't heard about or necessarily thought about so thank you for sharing! Especially since I'm in the UK right now the tea time one was super interesting! Kiitos

  • @PaulVinonaama
    @PaulVinonaama Рік тому +1

    Aamiainen probably more common.

  • @cihandemirtas1939
    @cihandemirtas1939 Рік тому

    paljon kitoksia

  • @garypeterson2079
    @garypeterson2079 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for the video. I work an evening shift so let's try this......Syön päivällisen kello 17, kahvitauko paljon, syön 23 jo amupalan 8. hope I got it right, kiitos

    • @KatChatsFinnish
      @KatChatsFinnish  Рік тому +1

      Kiitos for watching! I would maybe change the one part to "paljon kahvitaukoja" since it's in plural :)

    • @garypeterson2079
      @garypeterson2079 Рік тому

      @@KatChatsFinnish Thanks...I thought of it a little late....jo or ja.....for "and"...also "alot" before or after.....I'm a work in progress....Kiitos