I'm happy, brothers, you recognize Finnish as an Asian culture and a distant sister to Korean, thanks, and knowing that the sound of Finnish fascinates Koreans. ❤️❤️❤️🫂🫂🫂👍👍👍🥂😉🥂🥂🥂🥂
It’s because in Korean L and R are the same letter ㄹ. So the person who made the captions probably got confused on how to romanize the ㄹ letter, L or R😅
@@veerakatariina2851 I do know hangul, but I was just wondering why they didn't properly check it beforehand. Or maybe they did and an editor fixed the misspellings of her name (which is the most likely case) but didn't notice the very first one, who knows.
this is the cutest thing ever as a finnish person 😭❤️ the pronunciation is difficult for foreigners especially with words that have y, ä and ö so i think they did so well! 💗
10:00 The word "lentokonesuihkuturbiiniapumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas" was actually a word used for a single specific training for the Finnish Defence Forces. I think they changed the title around 1990s so that word is no longer in use. I used to refer a conscript service task where the soldier was trained for 11 months to work in jet airplane engine work as an assistant for the main mechanic. In case of war, that person would have probably helped to maintain jet engines for fighter jets. I would guess that the training was specifically to maintain BAE Systems Hawk 51 fighters which were probably in use by the time this super long word was in use.
I was one of those in the 89-90 and the word used was lentokoneapumekaanikko. Technically, the word used in this video is a correct, but not really used. Also, apumekaanikko wasn't qualified to handle the hardest and most complicated tasks ie. taking apart the jet engine and so on. Mostly just inspecting the planes and notifying the head mechanic, if something was wrong, refueling and so on. This was the basic. Some took extra training, like weapons (me) and such, so there might have been courses for engines too. Can't remember exactly, as it was 34 years ago 😵💫
Surprised no-one has explained that long word and that Lotta did not explain it properly either. It's a composite word - some languages like Finnish and German, take the concept of composite words, ie words that consist of multiple other words, to a wholly different level. This one term actually consists of nine words. LENTO means flight, KONE means machine, SUIHKU means shower/jet, TURBIINI means turbine, APU means help/assistant, MEKAANIKKO means a mechanic, ALI means under/assistant (yes, we have even more words for assistant), UPSEERI means officer in the military, OPPILAS means student. So put all together, the words mean a person in the military, who is going through non-commissioned officer school (in other words, assistant officer school) and who will become an assistant mechanic specialized in turbine jet engines meant for airplanes once they graduate. Literally translated: AIRPLANE-JET-TURBINE-ASSISTANT-MECHANIC-NONCOMMISSIONEDOFFICER-STUDENT. It is a real word, used by the Finnish Air Force but as Lotta explained, it is mostly used as a demonstration when teaching Finnish, not even soldiers and airmen use it outside of official documents.
It's not a real word. Real one would be apumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas. Lentokonesuihkuturbiini is just combined words, like dogcatbiscuitairplane, not a real word
@@jauho7483 it is a real word, as much as any word is real. Puolustusvoimilla on paljon hassuja termejä erikoistarpeita varten, samalla lailla kuin vaikkapa lääkäreillä.
You can definitely use "moi moi" when greeting a person, not just when someone is leaving! It's also usually (but not always) more common with younger people, the most basic way to greet someone is "hei" and saying goodbye "hei hei" . "Minun nimi on" sounds also kind of wrong to me, and I'm sure they wanted to make it easier to pronounce (I've also seen people claim that it's used in informal situations more, but I've only heard people who's mother tongue isn't Finnish use it). Proper way to say "My name is.." is "Minun nimeni on.." and if you want more informal "Mun nimi on..". "I am.." is kind of hard because while the proper way to say it is "Minä olen..", there's a lot of informal ways to say it (for example I'd say "Mää oon..") depending on where you live in Finland but it's totally ok to use the formal one!
As a person who is Ghanian and lives in Finland (and speak Finish)it might be a little hard to speak Finish at the beginning but it will become easier and easier as you learn it
These are absolutely so lovable videos and I just randomly started to watch this 🙂; who really had an idea to make these ;-). Saved my day, have to say, as a finn.
I was a bit disappointed to find that you didn't include word "hääyöaie" for this test. Most foreigners have trouble pronouncing that many vovels in sequence. And since Finnish doesn't have any silent letters, you have to pronounce every letter in that word!
Always go with making distiction with "shushing J" and "soft J" with J - "shushing J" as it is pronounced in English (and Korean) and "soft J" ( as in Finnish) as Y in "Ya!" "Yo!"
i think they did really well even that long word went relatively well, if they would have known before what those dots on letters mean i bet they could nailed those words easily.
I've never understood why foreigners learning Finnish are taught to say "Minun nimi on ____", as it's mostly children and people with developmental language disorders who talk like that (along with some regional dialects, of course). If you're learning Finnish and you want to sound more natural, you might want to try saying this instead: "Mun nimi on ____" (informal, most commonly used) or "(Minun) nimeni on ____" (formal, used more in written language). I'm all for dialects, but the thing that bothers me here is the fact that the expression "Minun nimi on" is neither commonly used nor grammatically correct, so it just seems a little silly to teach people to use the formal genitive "minun" without a possessive suffix. That aside, this was a very sweet video!
🇫🇮longest real words🇫🇮 *Pyyhkäisyelektronimikroskooppia* (engl. scanning electron microscope, SEM) käytetään tutkittaessa kiinteiden pintojen rakennetta ja kokoonpanoa. *Elintarviketurvallisuusvirasto* , Evira (🇸🇪 Livsmedelssäkerhetsverket) oli vuosina 2006-2018 toiminut valtion virasto.
Ok but why was hearing them introduce themselves in my first language that i use and hear on a daily basis so adorable 😭😭😭
felt😭 that be me with my first language
I'm happy, brothers, you recognize Finnish as an Asian culture and a distant sister to Korean, thanks, and knowing that the sound of Finnish fascinates Koreans.
❤️❤️❤️🫂🫂🫂👍👍👍🥂😉🥂🥂🥂🥂
Häh@@SinilkMudilaSama
@@SinilkMudilaSama "you recognize Finnish as an Asian culture and a distant sister to Korean" r/HolUp
@@SinilkMudilaSamaTä?
Not her name being spelled wrong in the subtitles 😭😭😭 Her name is Lotta, not Rota --> if you'd put another t in that you'd be calling her a rat 💀
🤣🤣 I was so confused until the end about her name. I was like I have never heard someone called Rota in Finland.
It’s because in Korean L and R are the same letter ㄹ. So the person who made the captions probably got confused on how to romanize the ㄹ letter, L or R😅
@@veerakatariina2851 I do know hangul, but I was just wondering why they didn't properly check it beforehand. Or maybe they did and an editor fixed the misspellings of her name (which is the most likely case) but didn't notice the very first one, who knows.
lol I was like Rota, wtf??
MY NAME IS LOTTA AND I'M FROM FINLAND TOO SO I WAS JUST DYING OF LAUGHTER LMAOO😭😂😂😂
this is the cutest thing ever as a finnish person 😭❤️ the pronunciation is difficult for foreigners especially with words that have y, ä and ö so i think they did so well! 💗
ootko suomalainen
@@armywhiz what do you think "as a finnish person" means..
@@AadaLuokkala maybe that she or he is finnish person😂
fr🥹🩷
Moi😊
tosi kiva nähä vihdoin suomen kieltä näissä videoissa!🫶🏻 Oli kans ihana kun täs tuotiin esille toi suomen ja korean ääntämisen samallaisuus
Kiva että en oo ainoo suomalainen täällä
Sama❤
Moi
Sama juttu! @SparkleEeveelution
Moro itekki oon suomalainen
torille ja silleen
Äläbä
no juurinäin
Torilla tavataan lol
Jep
Reps
my fellow kpop stans from finland .. Nice to see yall
It’s nice to see you too 🤭
nice to see u too😽
Moi
Well hello there 😮
Annyeonghaseyo🙋
OHH they were actually pretty good at this!
yessss
Some of them, kinda. Except their self introductions were extremely good. No way they didn't practice it before getting it on camera 😂
In start it was good but words got hardet
The way they said ”minun nimi on” was flawless(im finnish so i can tell)
Only thing is that technically it should be "minun nimeni on" but colloquially "mun nimi on" and obviously "mun" changes a bit by region
@@pyrylehtonen-caponigro3198you could also just say nimeni on 😂
@@RubyDaddy69 yes, but using minun/mun is more natural
And what we actually say is "mä oon" (I'm)
Or just "olen"
It's so trippy to actually understand your language when you hear it suddenly popping up in the vid😭
JEP
10:00 The word "lentokonesuihkuturbiiniapumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas" was actually a word used for a single specific training for the Finnish Defence Forces. I think they changed the title around 1990s so that word is no longer in use.
I used to refer a conscript service task where the soldier was trained for 11 months to work in jet airplane engine work as an assistant for the main mechanic. In case of war, that person would have probably helped to maintain jet engines for fighter jets. I would guess that the training was specifically to maintain BAE Systems Hawk 51 fighters which were probably in use by the time this super long word was in use.
I was one of those in the 89-90 and the word used was lentokoneapumekaanikko. Technically, the word used in this video is a correct, but not really used. Also, apumekaanikko wasn't qualified to handle the hardest and most complicated tasks ie. taking apart the jet engine and so on. Mostly just inspecting the planes and notifying the head mechanic, if something was wrong, refueling and so on. This was the basic. Some took extra training, like weapons (me) and such, so there might have been courses for engines too. Can't remember exactly, as it was 34 years ago 😵💫
Wow, great effort idols, Finnish sounds tough! 👏🇫🇮
haha im finland people
Same me and colloquial language in Finland is quite different from written language.
It is for someone who doesnt speak it but if you live there its just really easy
If you think Finnish is tough then you didn't hear Hungarian yet. (which is a distant relative of Finnish)
i smiled the entire video 😭😭it's just so giddy hearing ppl learn and speak finnish
Yeah, it's so fun and hilarious!
THE WIND IS EVERYTHING, THANK YOU! HEESOO, THANATORN, HANBIN, HAYUCHAN, HYOUNJOON, (AND CHANWON) ARE SO FANTASTIC, I LOVE THESE BOYS, FIGHTING ♡♡♡♡♡
The fact they all pronounce better than most English speakers trying to speak Finnish 👍🙂
Yeah English pronunciation is really different than Finnish pronunciation, but Korean pronunciation is a lot closer to Finnish
fr🥹
@@veerakatariina2851 Yeah, I would say eastern language speakers have easier time to pronounce Finnish because similar sounds in their own language.
Yep Finnish os a Asian Lang as Korean too, distant bros langs ans cultures.
and? finnish is as foreign to english speakers as it is to these guys.
As an person from Finland, they are absolutely adorable 😭
You're a cherishfull soul 😘
Sama :D
THIS IS THE FUNNIEST EPISODE OF THE WIND WITH THEM 😭😭 I LOVE THE EDITING TEAM, BUT I LOVE THE WIND MUCH MOREEEE❤❤❤
Even as an Estonian it was cool to watch them pronounce the words that I understand. They did amaazing!!
True❤❤❤❤❤
this is so funny to watch this as a finn and some of the pronunciations were actually pretty good
Surprised no-one has explained that long word and that Lotta did not explain it properly either. It's a composite word - some languages like Finnish and German, take the concept of composite words, ie words that consist of multiple other words, to a wholly different level. This one term actually consists of nine words. LENTO means flight, KONE means machine, SUIHKU means shower/jet, TURBIINI means turbine, APU means help/assistant, MEKAANIKKO means a mechanic, ALI means under/assistant (yes, we have even more words for assistant), UPSEERI means officer in the military, OPPILAS means student. So put all together, the words mean a person in the military, who is going through non-commissioned officer school (in other words, assistant officer school) and who will become an assistant mechanic specialized in turbine jet engines meant for airplanes once they graduate. Literally translated: AIRPLANE-JET-TURBINE-ASSISTANT-MECHANIC-NONCOMMISSIONEDOFFICER-STUDENT.
It is a real word, used by the Finnish Air Force but as Lotta explained, it is mostly used as a demonstration when teaching Finnish, not even soldiers and airmen use it outside of official documents.
There should be MOOTTORI after Jet turbine.
It's not a real word. Real one would be apumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas. Lentokonesuihkuturbiini is just combined words, like dogcatbiscuitairplane, not a real word
@@jauho7483 it is a real word, as much as any word is real. Puolustusvoimilla on paljon hassuja termejä erikoistarpeita varten, samalla lailla kuin vaikkapa lääkäreillä.
This is so cute. Nauroin kun suomenkielen pisin sana tuli... Poor boys 😂😂
ne oli nii hämmästyneitä😭
Nii, en ittekää ollu tainu kuulla sitä vaikka koko elämäni asunu Suomessa 😅
You can definitely use "moi moi" when greeting a person, not just when someone is leaving! It's also usually (but not always) more common with younger people, the most basic way to greet someone is "hei" and saying goodbye "hei hei" . "Minun nimi on" sounds also kind of wrong to me, and I'm sure they wanted to make it easier to pronounce (I've also seen people claim that it's used in informal situations more, but I've only heard people who's mother tongue isn't Finnish use it). Proper way to say "My name is.." is "Minun nimeni on.." and if you want more informal "Mun nimi on..". "I am.." is kind of hard because while the proper way to say it is "Minä olen..", there's a lot of informal ways to say it (for example I'd say "Mää oon..") depending on where you live in Finland but it's totally ok to use the formal one!
yeah, no native speaker would actually say "Minun nimi on...", I've only heard it said by beginner language students.
I prefer it when foreigners say minä and minun rather than mä and mun, though.
"Terve. Minä oon Aitokoojii" on luonnollisin minulle.
Nii sitä mäki ihmettelin et miksei vois muka sanoo moi moi😂
Ah, the middle guy is really good!
Hyounjoon is soooo adorable!
Thank you for this I live in Finland but it is still hard to learn finish
can you speak finnish
bexause I speak finnish
@@armywhiz yes
keep going, im trying to learn korean!
this was awesome n entertaining :3 ty ! she did amazing job teaching them
Ohh! These guys started to nail it!
Watching the learning process was surprisingly committing.
as a Finnish WHIZ, I'm so proud of them and I'm literally crying🥲🩷
suomi whiz no way😭😭 oon predebut stan ja legit toivon NIIN paljo et ne tulee joskus suomee 😣😣
@@tilda1579äää sama täällä! toivotaan et ne tulis Suomeen☹️🫶🏻
Fun video and their pronunciation at the end with self introductions was very good.
As a person who is Ghanian and lives in Finland (and speak Finish)it might be a little hard to speak Finish at the beginning but it will become easier and easier as you learn it
My friend speaks Finnish, and i am learning it✨🤚🏼
ymmärärkö mitä tämä tarkoittaa
finnish is so hard
@@armywhiz it is💀
@@crazyformyself9466 😂
Travolta
People Who speak finnish👇
Mä
Jees
Mä
Mä
Mä
Lotta is a good teacher here! Love from Finland 💙
They did an amazing job tbh, which isn't that surprising considering the many similarities of Korean, Japanese and Finnish languages
this was so much fun to watch!! :DD they're adorable! towards the end hanbin sounded almost fluent hahah
Heii torilla tavataan ja silleen! 😂 mut joo oikeesti tosi kiva nähdä et suomea mainitaan enemmän ja enemmän.
I love these kind of videos, nothing but wholesomeness
This was fun 😄 I love how they really try. They are actually really good 👏
Lyijytäytekynä is actually a mechanical pencil
as a finn, this was absolutely hilarious and entertaining
Oh it gives me more motivation to learn korean when Lotta said that it should pretty easy for finnish to learn korean lol
yes, and especially the colloquial language is similar.
love this, thank you
As a Finnish person and a K-pop Stan I……
BURST OUT LAUGHING!
Ok wow, guys did VERY well! ✨👍🏻
These are absolutely so lovable videos and I just randomly started to watch this 🙂; who really had an idea to make these ;-). Saved my day, have to say, as a finn.
❤❤❤❤🫂🫂🫂🫂🫂
Lol hyounjoon face 0:43 😂😂
Really good job boys! Much respect, for trying our tough language. Great teacher, as well.
They actually did a decent job on some of the words. They started very well on the airplane word too.
Hyounjoon is effortless funny 😂
So adorable & hilarious in the most wholesome way!😂🫶 greets from Finland from an army🙋
😱😱not the scary hammer!!! 😂love these videos
Awwww it's so endearing when they ask Lotta to teach them to say "I love you" :3
They were actually pretty good!!
I was a bit disappointed to find that you didn't include word "hääyöaie" for this test. Most foreigners have trouble pronouncing that many vovels in sequence. And since Finnish doesn't have any silent letters, you have to pronounce every letter in that word!
I’m Finnish and to be honest this was so cute!❤
I LOVE this video!!!❤❤😁😁
I'm from finland❤🇫🇮🇫🇮
Moi
@@The_shrimp123 moi
I'm actually impressed! They did quite well considering it was probably their first time!
It was a great video ❤❤❤❤lovely the Finn gal is a lovely and fun person❤🍻🍻🍻🍻🥂🥂🥂🥂🌷🌷🌷🌷🦦🎵🫂⭐🦉🌹🌷🎶✌️
The Wind ❤
👏Amazing effort, guys! Finnish ain't easy.🎤
I'm from Finland
❤❤❤😘😘😘
I need more finnish videos)
this is so good! so funny 🤗
So much fun! These guys had good effort 👍 greetings from 🇫🇮
Haha this was so cute! As a finn I approve. 😊
THIS WAS TOO FUNNY I NEED MORE
this was so nice to see omg
STAN THE WIND ❤
Awww they are learning finnish! This makes me happy as a finnish person 💕
The wonderfully behaved young people, although not quite successful, were ready to try. Thank you.
omg this is so weird. I love The Wind and hearing them to speak my first language is just..
This is my first time seeing this kpop group, but i lowkey want to go see their concertttt 💕
Always go with making distiction with "shushing J" and "soft J" with J - "shushing J" as it is pronounced in English (and Korean) and "soft J" ( as in Finnish) as Y in "Ya!" "Yo!"
Me as a Finlandian can tell that this was super fun😂
Love it😁
Its cute , when they try to say the words🥺🫶🏻
Ihana Lotta
Thanatorn is gifted at languages, I've noticed it before, too
Im from finland so this is pretty fun to watch😂🎉❤
Omg awesome effort idols finnish sounds look really tough❤
Why did she translate "yötyö" as vomiting. Yötyö means "night job/shift
Wow Koreans are super intelligent, i love this xDD! Great job!!!
The Wind is better than me in pronouncing those words
I'm also trying but I sound sh1t 😂
This proves that Fingolia was the victor of the great Finno-Korean hyperwar.
😅😅😅😅😅
go back to 2nordic4you
”Minä rakastan sinua”
”NO!”
Thats comedy to a Finnish person like my self😂
i think they did really well even that long word went relatively well, if they would have known before what those dots on letters mean i bet they could nailed those words easily.
Finnish grammar detective here! "My name is" would more accurately be "minun nimeni on" not "minun nimi on".
As a Fin i feel noticed bc there arent many Finnish things in videos
im finland fan of the wind😂
That red t shirt guy is ao handsome ❤😍🤩
That’s Hanbin
CHOI HANBIN ARE SO DAMN HANDSOME ❤❤❤
yes when hanbin says that "minä olen suomalainen" it sounds like he is finland human
He beats women
@@fabricio4794 why you think so?
I'm happy as a Finnish person to see k-pop idols trying to learn my mother language
Hyvä pojat!😊
That bromance moment was everything
I've never understood why foreigners learning Finnish are taught to say "Minun nimi on ____", as it's mostly children and people with developmental language disorders who talk like that (along with some regional dialects, of course). If you're learning Finnish and you want to sound more natural, you might want to try saying this instead: "Mun nimi on ____" (informal, most commonly used) or "(Minun) nimeni on ____" (formal, used more in written language).
I'm all for dialects, but the thing that bothers me here is the fact that the expression "Minun nimi on" is neither commonly used nor grammatically correct, so it just seems a little silly to teach people to use the formal genitive "minun" without a possessive suffix. That aside, this was a very sweet video!
Lyijytäytekynä literally means pen filled with lead. Lyijy=lead, Täyte=filling/filled, Kynä=pen/pencill.
When are they coming to Finland? Where do I get updated???
12:27 "Minä rakastan sinua" "No!"
How did I miss that? Thanks for commenting. 🤣
heesoo tried😩
🇫🇮longest real words🇫🇮
*Pyyhkäisyelektronimikroskooppia* (engl. scanning electron microscope, SEM) käytetään tutkittaessa kiinteiden pintojen rakennetta ja kokoonpanoa.
*Elintarviketurvallisuusvirasto* , Evira (🇸🇪 Livsmedelssäkerhetsverket) oli vuosina 2006-2018 toiminut valtion virasto.
They really went ham with the front vowels 😅
As a Finnish person this is kinda funny
Im from Finland. moiii!!
Sama