This article deals with features of the spoken Finnish language, specifically how it is spoken in Greater Helsinki capital region and the cities in the Central Finnish dialectal area, such as Jyväskylä, Lahti, Hyvinkää, and Hämeenlinna. The standard language is based on these dialects, as most "dialectal" features are reductions with respect to Central Finnish. In addition, this applies also to the coastal cities, such as Vaasa and Porvoo1, which have been traditionally Swedish-speaking, and have experienced an influx of Finnish speakers from a variety of dialectal areas.
The basics of Finnish needed to fully understand this article can be found in pages about Finnish phonology and Finnish grammar.
There is also the problem that purists want to avoid irregularity regardless of actual usage. This has left some sound changes common in spoken language out from the standard language. There is a tendency to favor "more logical" constructs over easily pronounceable ones. This ideal does reflect spoken Finnish usage to a degree, as Finnish is demostrably a conservative language with few reduction processes, but it is not entirely accurate. For example, ruoka produces ruoan when consonant gradation removes the 'k', but in spoken language, a further assimilation produces ruuan. Both spellings are used even in standard language. The problem of avoiding "irregularity" is most pronounced in spelling, where internal sandhi is not transcribed, because there is the idea that morphemes should be immutable. For example, the "correct" spelling is syönpä ("I'll eat"), even though the pronunciation is always syömpä. The explanation is that -n- and -pä are in different morphemes. Just like the explanation that English boys is not spelled with a z is that they are in different morphemes.
There are also a number of grammatical forms which are used in written Finnish, but only very rarely in spoken. For example, there are a number of constructions using participles which are usually rendered analytically in speech. Some cases and moods are rarely constructive in spoken Finnish, e.g. the instructive and comitative cases and the potential mood. Some survive only in expressions.
On the other hand, spoken language has its own features rare or not found in formal language. Most importantly, there is very common external sandhi, and some assimilatory sound changes. (On the contrary, there is no vowel reduction.) There are also grammatical innovations, such as question formation by simple word order, e.g. menet sä? vs. sä menet., "Do you go?" vs. "You go", respectively. In some variants (e.g. Vaasa, Kymenlaakso) of spoken Finnish -n kanssa is abbreviated into a clitic that is effectively a comitative case, e.g. -nkans or -nkaa.
One important sound change, which has gone to completion in Estonian but occurs complicated in Finnish is the glottalization of word-final 'n'. In some dialects, such as Savo, word-final 'n' is systematically replaced by a glottal stop, e.g. isä'iän ← isän ääni "father's voice". (Orthographically it is an apostrophe.) In the Helsinki area, both pronunciations are seen. This means that the genitive/accusative form -n, which is very common in any form of Finnish, is simply noted by a glottal stop. However, this glottal stop undergoes sandhi whenever followed by consonant, or more often than not (see below).
Since the stress in Finnish always falls on the first syllable of the word, the ends of words greater than one syllable tend to erode. This is frequently by the loss of a final vowel, or assimilation of a final vowel with a preceding vowel. This is actually a feature of Western Finnish dialects, found also in Savonian dialects and Estonian. The paragoge using -i (as prescribed in standard language) is not found, only epenthesis using -i- occurs whenever inflectional endings are added.
Final vowel often assimilates, especially in Helsinki, where only the resulting chroneme marks the partitive in many words.
A related phenomenon is the final consonant sandhi, similar to the initial consonant mutation in Welsh. It allows the speech to not to "get stuck" to word boundaries, and because of this, may be heard even in formal language. When a word ends in a stressed mora, which ends in a vowel or an omittable consonant, the consonant beginning the next word is doubled and it connects the words. For example, nyt vaan becomes nyvvaan. The two words end up being pronounced as if they were a compound word, i.e. the auxiliary stress is on the syllables beginning the words. This is virtually never written down, except in dialectal transcriptions. For example, "Now it arrives! You go first":
If the consonant cannot be omitted, this does not happen. For example:
Generally, you should notice that spoken Finnish is not neatly divided up into words as the spelling would suggest, due to other phonotactical sandhi effects. For example, regardless of word boundaries, np is always mp, nk is always ŋk (where ŋ is a velar nasal). Observe the result, if we denote only an actual break in pronunciation with a space:
The root words are also shorter:
The third person pronouns 'hän', 'he' are commonly used in spoken language only in Southwestern Finland, and increasingly rarely also there. Elsewhere they are usually replaced by their non-personal equivalents - note that there is no pejorative sense in talking about people as 'it', unlike in English.
For example, the sentence "Did he mistake me for you?" has these forms:
Numerals 1-10 in colloquial spoken Finnish:
If one is forced to count fast then even shorter forms are used:
The numerals 1–9 have their own names, different from the cardinal numbers used in counting. Numbers that have longer names are often shortened in speech. This may be problematic for a foreigner to understand, if she/he has learned words by book:
The -kko suffix normally denotes a group of x people, but on 8 and 9, it doubles as a synonyme for the numeral's name. Kahdeksikko is also used to describe a lemniscate-like shape.
The regular -Onen / -inen forms can additionally be used of objects with an ID number. For example, bus 107 is called sataseiska, and a competition winner is an ykkönen (not *sataseittemän or *yks.)
In the latter case the 'me' is obligatory, whereas it is not in the 'proper' case since the verb's inflection indicates the person and number. However, 'ollaan oltu lomalla' may be used for example when being asked 'Where have you been?'='Missä te olette olleet?', yet this is very spoken language, and should not be used in written text.
The third-person singular form of the present tense is often used after 'ne' in place of the plural form. The full present-tense paradigm of 'puhua' = 'to speak' in everyday speech is:
Some frequently used short verbs have abbreviated (irregular) roots. There is a peculiarity here: in Finnish, the third person imperative is the root (uninflected form) for personal forms. For example, mene! (go!) gives the personal forms menen, menet, menee (I go, you go, he goes, respectively). The first infinitive is mennä "to go", where consonant gradation changes -nn- into -n-, the final -ä is removed and -e- is added: mennä → mene-. However, the root might change in spoken language, even though the infinitive stays the same.
| engl. | I inf. | imp. | irreg. imp. |
|---|---|---|---|
| be | olla | ole | oo |
| go | mennä | mene | mee |
| come | tulla | tule | tuu |
| put | panna | pane | paa |
For example, Mene tai tule, mutta pane se ovi kiinni ja ole hiljaa → Mee tai tuu, mut paa se ovi kii ja oo hiljaa. (word-by-word) "Go or come, but put the door closed and be quiet." The reply might be Meen tai tuun, paan oven kii ja oon hiljaa ("I will go or come, put the door closed and be quiet"). The infinitives are unchanged: Mennä tai tulla, panna ovi kii ja olla hiljaa ("To go or to come, to put the door closed and to be quiet").
In everyday speech, the -ko/kö suffix has the -s clitic added, becoming -kos/kös, which in turn reduces to -ks:
The clitic -s is also found in imperatives, e.g. menes "(I expect you to) go!"
In e.g. the Helsinki area, the -tkö elides not to -ks, but -t before a 's', e.g. menetkö sä ? menet sä. Because this is identical to sä menet except for the word order, question formation by word order is grammaticalized.
Spoken language has a different grammar for the possessive suffix. For direct addresses, save for one form it is not used, so that the pronoun cannot be omitted. Even in the second-person singular, the pronoun is virtually never omitted.
| Formal | Spoken | English |
|---|---|---|
| (minun) taloni | mun talo | my house |
| (sinun) talosi | sun talo(s)/talos | your (sg) house |
| (hänen) talonsa | sen talo | his/her house |
| (meidän) talomme | meiän talo | our house |
| (teidän) talonne | teiän talo | your (pl) house |
| (heidän) talonsa | niitten/niien talo | their house |
Notice one fact: Finnish has no possessive adjectives. The pronouns are regularly inflected, like if "I's house", "you's house", "we's house".
However, the suffices -s, -nsa and -nne are used to avoid repeating a pronoun, e.g. "He took his hat and left" is Se otti lakkinsa ja lähti. (The incorrect word-by-word translation from English *Se otti sen lakin ja lähti would mean "He took the hat and left".)
Usually this construction indicates mistrust or frustration. (There is a less than serious text calling this aggressiivi.) However, it can be a neutral negative statement: Tästä artikkelista mitään opi (From this article, you don't learn anything).
This is a feature of several dialects, such as those of Ostrobothnia and Savonia: breaking up some consonant clusters on syllable boundaries with an epenthetic vowel. The neutral vowel is the same as the preceding vowel. For example, juhla → juhula "celebration", salmi → salami "strait", palvelu → palavelu "service", halpa → halapa, äffä → ähävä (via ähvä) "letter F". Pairs of dissimilar consonants with /l/ or /h/ (in Savo, also /n/) as the first consonant are subject to epenthesis; other clusters or geminates are not.
| Written | Spoken | Written example | Spoken example |
|---|---|---|---|
| minä | m' | minä olen, minä en, minä en ole | moon, men, mäen o |
| sinä | s' | sinä olet, sinä et, sinä et ole | soot, säet, säet o |
| hän | s' | hän on, hän ei, hän ei ole | son, sei, sei'oo |
| me | m' | me olemme, me emme, me emme ole | mollaan, mei, mei'olla |
| te | t' | te olette, te ette, te ette ole | tootte, tette, tette oo |
| he | n' | he ovat, he eivät, he eivät ole | noon, nei, nei'oo |
One small detail, which irritates people from other places to no end, is that the word kuka ("who") is replaced by its partitive form, ketä ("at who"), e.g. Ketä siellä oli? ("Who was there?") Other unusual question pronouns are mihinä (std. missä, "where") and mihkä (std. mihin, "into where"). Here, the word mihinä uses the ancient Finnish locative currently known as the essive case, instead of the standard specialized locative inessive case.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Spoken Finnish".
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