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Finnish
Genealogical Word List
   

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Language Characteristics
Additional Resources
Key Words
General Word List
     
Ä
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This list contains Finnish words with their English translations. The words included here are those that you are likely to find in genealogical sources. If the word you are looking for is not on this list, please consult a Finnish-English dictionary (see the "Additional Resources" section below).

Finnish is related to Estonian and distantly related to Hungarian. It is not related to other European languages. The official languages of Finland are Finnish and Swedish. Until the end of the 1800s, records were kept in Swedish. For help reading those records, see the Swedish Genealogical Word List(31028). Some Latin phrases also appear in older Finnish parish registers. For help, use the Latin Genealogical Word List (34077).


LANGUAGE CHARACTERISTICS



Variant Forms of Words

In Finnish, as in English, the forms of some words will vary according to how they are used in a sentence. Who—whose—whom or marry—marries—married are examples of words in English with variant forms.

As you read Finnish records, be aware that the endings of most words vary with usage. One word in Finnish often translates into English as two or more words. For example, talo (house) changes to talossa (in the house).

Plurals. Finnish indicates the plural of a word in two ways:

Possessives. In addition to or instead of using words like my and theirs, Finnish adds endings to words to show possession. If a word already has another ending on it, the possessive ending appears at the end of the word. For example, see how possessives change the words talo (house) and talossa (in the house):

his house hänen talonsa
in his house hänen talossansa

See Table 1 for a more complete description of possessives.

Prepositions and postpositions. In English, words like in, on, with, before, and after are prepositions. They come before a noun. For example, in the house.

Depending on the various grammar rules, Finnish prepositions may appear in one of three ways:

  • They may come before the noun. For example, ennen sotaa (before the war).
  • They may come after the noun. (In this case, it is called a postposition.) For example, sodan jälkeen(after the war).
  • They may be added to the noun. For example Helsinki becomes Helsinkiin (into Helsinki). Table 2, on the next page, contains other examples.

Word endings. Endings are also added to words for other grammatical purposes. See Tables 1 and 3 for other examples.

Table 1. Possessive Endings

Possessive and Ending Meaning Examples: talo (house), talossa (in the house) Translation
minun, -ni my talo » minun talonitalo » minun talossani house » my househouse » in my house
sinun-, si your (singular) talo » sinun talositalo » sinun talossasi house » your househouse » in your house
hänen, -nsa, -nsä or double vowel + n his, her talo » hänen talonsatalo » hänen talossansatalo » hänen talossaan house » his (her) househouse » in his (her) househouse » in his (her) house
meidän -mme our talo » meidän talommetalo » meidän talossamme house » our househouse » in our house
teidän, -nne your (plural) talo » teidän talonnetalo » teidän talossanne house » your househouse » in your house
heidn, -nsa, -nsä or double vowel + n their talo » heidän talonsatalo » heidän talossansatalo » heidän talossaan house » their househouse » in their househouse » in their house

Table 2. Prepositional Endings on Nouns

Ending Basic Meaning Example Translation
-a, -ä, -ta, -t of, some suku » sukua family » of a family
-in by means of, with oma käsi » omin ksin one’s own hands » with one’s own hands
-ine + a possessive ending (see Table 1) together with lapsi » lapsinensa or lapsineen child » together with his (her or their) children
-ksi changed into, become vaimo » otti vaimoksi wife » took for a wife or became a wife
-lla, -llä at, by, in Tampere » Tampereella Tampere » in (at) Tampere
-lle to Tampere » Tampereelle Tampere » to Tampere
-lta, -ltä from Tampere » Tampereelta Tampere » from Tampere
-n of talo » talon väki house » people of the house
-na, -nä as lapsi » lapsena child » as a child
-ssa, -ssä in Helsinki » Helsingissä Helsinki » in Helsinki
double vowel + n into Helsinki » Helsinkiin Helsinki » into Helsinki
-sta, -stä from Helsinki » Helsingistä Helsinki » from Helsinki

Table 3. Other Word Endings

Ending Basic Meaning Example Translation
-t forms a plural talo » talot house » houses
-ko, -k indicates a question Helsingissä » Helsingissä in Helsinki » in Helsinki?
-ton without, -less, un- lapsi » lapseton child » childless
-tta, -ttä (on verbs) without nähdä » näkemätt to see » without seeing
-n, -t shows a direct object talo » näen talon
talo » näen talot
house » I see the house
house » I see the houses

Ending: -lla, -ll followed by a form of the verb olla (to be): on, ei ole, oli, ei ollut, on ollut, or ei ole ollut
Basic Meaning: shows possession or ownership (to have)

Example Translation
Anna » Annalla on Anna » Anna has
Anna Toivonen » Anna Toivosella oli Anna Toivonen » Anna Toivonen had
minä » munulla on ollut I » I have had
sinä » sunulla oli you (singular) » you had
hän » hänell oli he/she » he/she had
me » meillä ei ole ollut we » we have not had
te » teillä on you (plural) » you have
he » heillä ei ole they » they do not have


Spelling Changes

When an ending is added to a word, the consonants within that word may also change. Consider the following examples:

Letters that Change Examples
ht to hd lahti to lahden
k to (nothing) Ilmajoki to Ilmajoen
kk to k kirkko to kirkon
lt to ll ilta to illan
mp to mm lampi to lammen
n to s Heinonen to Heinosen
nk to ng Helsinki to Helsingin
nt to nn isnt to isnnn
p to v orpo to orvon
pp to p pappi to papin
rk to r Turku to Turun
rt to rr virta to virran
s to d or t uusi to uuden, uuteen
tt to t tytt to tytn
uku to uvu suku to suvun
vowel+t to vowel+d iti to idin


Alphabetical Order

Written Finnish uses three letters in addition to the twenty-six letters used in the English alphabet: ä, ö, and for Swedish names, å. Finnish dictionaries and indexes, this word list, and the Locality Search of the Family History Library CatalogLook this term up in the glossary. all use the following alphabetical order:

a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z å ä ö

The letters v and w are frequently alphabetized as the same letter.

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