I love the Finns - relaxed in the positive way - so friendly and embrasing ... fiirst I met Finns back in 1962, Ever since I love Finns whereever I meet them. I do have several Fiinnish friends. I am sure you would love them as well! (I am from Denmark)
Vesihiisi is not snake, it is a shapeshifting water spirit similar to kappa. Your command of the language was pretty impressive and I am glad you found Finland to be to your liking :)
Oi miten ihana video. Kyynel tuli silmään kauniista sanoistasi. Tervetuloa takaisin. So lovely video! A tear came from my eye because of your beautiful words. Welcome back to home!
Riisipiirakka or Carelian pie as you said has a rye base and rise in. And that bread you were talking about is rye bread also. Juhannus could be also translated as a Mid Summer Fest.
Your Finnish so good and that story you told about the elder in the bus might have been the fact that a lot of elders in Finland are alone/lonely so they really love when they're talked to even if it's just a simple greeting I bet you might have made that persons day a little better to be honest
Wow your finnish is amazing considering you only lived here for 22 months! I think for most foreigners it takes at least 5 years to speak that well and many don't ever get the pronounciation to the level you have. Amazing!
3:04 It sounded like this: Kokokokokokko koko kokokkoko koko kokko. When it's written and spoken like this: Kokoo koko kokko kokoon. Koko kokkokoko? Koko kokko kokoon.
Very good insight of Finland. Maybe because of you had the possibility to live in so many different types of cities for so long and experience our culture. In any case I'm proud of how Finland made such an impact on you. Much love from the other side of that bridge of Jyväskylä. You do know - home is where the heart is - sooo...
We Finns call Jyväskylä area Central Finland, like in America Midwest is around Mississippi, though technically it's still a bit closer to the East Coast. In Finland, historically the northernmost 1/3 of Finland, Lapland, was not thought of as a part of Finland, but just - Lapland, land of the Sámi people, the most indigenous people in the northern Europe. So if we don't count Lapland - Jyväaskylä is in fact in Central Finland. Nowadays the Sámi are a minority even in Lapland, but their situation has at least proven a bit in recent 30-20 years, they get more education in their own langauge, there's TV news in their language, and they have legal protection for their land ownership - at least better than before. Lapland was in the 19th century like the Wild West, uhm, Wild North of Finland. It's Still not densely populated, and a bit exotic for most Finns.
Greetings from Espoo. You pronounced those tongue twisters incredibly well. Those aren't very easy even to native speakers. IN fact you pronounced all Finnish words much better than average English speaker who has learned Finnish. Our language isn't very easy to pronounce for a native English speaker because of the hard R's etc. By the way, I saw the daylight first time in Joensuu long time ago.
I just left Helsinki...was staying off Mannerheimintie katu and the city center was just a few min away. Its not a normal winter this year. Moving there in the next year. Love Suomi!
Thank you! I would love to hear more about Joensuu because I will study there soon. What sort of adventuring is there? I am looking forward to the lakes and forests.
What a nice video. Your tale about the old woman reminded me about this one guy who once paid for my train. I had ran to the train and noticed I had no cash when the ticket sales man came. The guy just paid for my ticket and said something I guess would translate to "it's cool", and we stood there in silence 'till my stop came.
My funniest memory of mopoautos, the moped cars, happened a few years ago when in my part of the town a slick looking businessman in a black suit used to drive one for a while. I imagined his usual BMW or Audi was under repair and thus he had needed to find some other means of personal transport in the meantime. Maybe the thing belonged to his son/daughter, who knows. It was a hilarious sight, nonetheless.
mopo/ mopoauto age is 15. A mopo is as he said a 50cc, but most teens with a mopo are as we call it "jonne" and make their mopeds go faster, and especially in small towns or suburbs you wont find a legal moped. And stunting with mopeds or motorcycles is also very big here.
Its interesting how when you speak finnish you have "umms" in between when native soeaker would say "öö" :D your accent is beautiful, and pronounciation is very solid, one of the best and fluent Ive heard!!
I'll have to learn some Finnish language, and practice. I grew up in Chicago, but now live in Arcata Calif. Always loved to travel and backpack wilderness areas of US. Think i would love the nature in Finland, and of course the Finnish people. I would greatly appreciate the quiet and the reserveness, although im gregareous, but i would learn.
:grins: So true about the solidity of friendship with a Finn once you have proven your metal, so to speak, and you have their trust. That is a very special thing. Another very special, foodie, thing are Karjalanpiirakka ... they are so delicious! Sadly for me, my aim of moving to Finland to stay has been detonated by Brexit - the vote alone shredded the Pound and that sank the house purchase I had underway at the time (in Riihimäki in fact, pretty much next door to Hyvinkää). And now hope is gone of escaping British shores for the 'snowy North' ... maybe time for a long holiday there tho' ... :). That story of the kind lady on the bus was very touching indeed.
Epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkäänköhän? … is that longest Finnsih word build so far which he said. Meaning about like 'I wonder if not even with his/her disorganization non-causing ability?' :) It's not really used anywhere, it's an artificial (yet technically sound) word. I once managed to ask that in a Fb message to my cousin talking about a 3rd person :) It's based on the possibility to derive new words from already existing derivations for very, very long chain. Like English can make from that word organ. Well, more like Latin & French already did a great part of that work. But in real life compounds (like laptop from lap + top) are the longest used words in Finnish. More than 2 can be connected. Then Finnish is not making much longer words than Swedish or German, who use the same principle. But the core words in Finnish tend to be 2 syllable long, when in English, Swedish & German they are often 1 syllable long. And a few derivational elements are longer than one syllable long, which is a bit cumbersome. (compare Latin -ation - well, the -at- comes from a verb, but in English it doesn't show). Numbers should be written together in Finnish, like kaksikymmentäyksi - 21 (yksi = 1, kaksi = 2), spoken is easier: kakskytyks. So because this can carry on theoretically forever, because what's the biggest number? Not found yet, but it's close to infinity. So you can always add one more number - and all that should be written together. BUT - in English the chemical compounds should be written together, as compound words, if not in code form. So you can actually build English words which are minutes long to say. There's a TH-cam video where one crazy Russian (or Ukrainian) actually reads such a word. There's likely a practical limit how complex chemical mixes you can make, so the compounds are not as close to infinite as numbers. But long they can be!
Nice, owning a Mökki near Joensuu as a foreigner :) Lived the whole last winter there. Beautiful landscapes! Being there in summertime twice as well. Living in Jyväskylä now. Nice parallels. Living for 3 months in this city now. Interested in Espoo and Helsinki as well. As you took the bus from jyväskylä south over a bridge, you don't mean Säynätsalo or not that far south?
That's a great word! Epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydelläänsäkäänköhänkö = I wonder if it's really possible even with his/her unintentional urge to anti-unorganizationalize.
last time i went to oulunkylä i almost got killed by speed head hobo with wrench and paint brush and had to run like 2km becouse he thought i stole his phone :D
Estonians and Finns understand each other on an elementary level in both directions. Yes, that takes some time, but still. Genetically proven that Estonians and Finns were the same nation 2500 years ago. Estonians learn Finnish swift, and Finns learn Estonian ideally.
Nordic winter isn’t cool. In England we have a black pudding but never had it or blood sausage. I love the aposolte trust and directness. Sorry I can’t spell. The summer celebration I’ve done in Germany.
Finland's ranking is dropping at a breakneck pace. Education had been independent in schools. Now Politicians and this senior officials make themselves important and, in their own opinion now, “invent” good new methods and projects to make the system more efficient. The teaching is now mixed up. The ranking will drop drastically.
I have lived in Finland since 1974 ! and it's great ! So if any forigner living Finland complains about it, Then go to where you feel ok! SUOMI , SAUNA, SISU; SIBELIUS
nailed that ''vesihiisi sihisi hississä'' :D im surprised.
only finnish people watch these
mopoautos at 15,
cars at 18, there's an exception, u can get a licence at 17 if u state a reason you should get it, aka school etc.
Good finnish pronouncing for a guy who lived here only two years
Meanwhile some people are here two Generations and dont even care to learn the language
So good. Always wanted to go to Finland because my favorite composer, Sibelius
I love the Finns - relaxed in the positive way - so friendly and embrasing ... fiirst I met Finns back in 1962, Ever since I love Finns whereever I meet them. I do have several Fiinnish friends. I am sure you would love them as well! (I am from Denmark)
heyas danske guy!
Vesihiisi is not snake, it is a shapeshifting water spirit similar to kappa. Your command of the language was pretty impressive and I am glad you found Finland to be to your liking :)
I bet that 95% of the views for this video come from finland.
20:51 Honestly this is impressive for 2 years in finland. Even though it's full of errors i could understand everything. 😁
Meanwhile "Some" people are here over two Generations and dont even care to learn
It was touching to hear you speaking so good and fluent finnish. Because it takes time to learn. 👍
Puhut kyllä hienosti suomea! Hieno juttu.
Oi miten ihana video. Kyynel tuli silmään kauniista sanoistasi. Tervetuloa takaisin. So lovely video! A tear came from my eye because of your beautiful words. Welcome back to home!
Your finnish is very impressive for only 2 years of learning!
Cars are smaller in whole Europe. Our cities are built in size of horse and cart. Or walking.
whole*
ja cities*
@@Roope-yq3yx Unohdit meidän kuninkaat, fillaristit :D
Trikoot kunniaan!
This is the best non-native finnish speaker speaking finnish Ive heard in a while! So good to hear nice things about our country.
Thank you for sharing such a beautiful stories about our country and by the way you speak EXCELLENT Finnish..............like WOW
Riisipiirakka or Carelian pie as you said has a rye base and rise in. And that bread you were talking about is rye bread also. Juhannus could be also translated as a Mid Summer Fest.
Your Finnish so good and that story you told about the elder in the bus might have been the fact that a lot of elders in Finland are alone/lonely so they really love when they're talked to even if it's just a simple greeting I bet you might have made that persons day a little better to be honest
Wow your finnish is amazing considering you only lived here for 22 months! I think for most foreigners it takes at least 5 years to speak that well and many don't ever get the pronounciation to the level you have. Amazing!
This dude is so wholesome. Much love from Finland!
fun fact: Finland was the first country in the world where women got rights to vote. It was in year 1912.
3:04
It sounded like this:
Kokokokokokko koko kokokkoko koko kokko.
When it's written and spoken like this:
Kokoo koko kokko kokoon. Koko kokkokoko? Koko kokko kokoon.
Very good insight of Finland. Maybe because of you had the possibility to live in so many different types of cities for so long and experience our culture. In any case I'm proud of how Finland made such an impact on you. Much love from the other side of that bridge of Jyväskylä. You do know - home is where the heart is - sooo...
Thank you for this great video. You are very perceptive and you made excellent observations. Also, your pronunciation of Finnish is on the spot.
He speaks Finnish SO WELL, woah! 🤯 Thank you for the kind words. 🥰
You made me cry;) Lots of love from Finland, hope you are fine❤
Your Finnish is absolutely perfect! Well done! Welcome back!
considering finnish is a very hard language to learn his finnish is pretty good
This was a great one among many greats. The guy expressed himself so well
Thank you so much for this, made me feel very warm inside.
When he said vesihiisi sihisi hississä my face went 😮
We Finns call Jyväskylä area Central Finland, like in America Midwest is around Mississippi, though technically it's still a bit closer to the East Coast. In Finland, historically the northernmost 1/3 of Finland, Lapland, was not thought of as a part of Finland, but just - Lapland, land of the Sámi people, the most indigenous people in the northern Europe. So if we don't count Lapland - Jyväaskylä is in fact in Central Finland.
Nowadays the Sámi are a minority even in Lapland, but their situation has at least proven a bit in recent 30-20 years, they get more education in their own langauge, there's TV news in their language, and they have legal protection for their land ownership - at least better than before. Lapland was in the 19th century like the Wild West, uhm, Wild North of Finland. It's Still not densely populated, and a bit exotic for most Finns.
I live in Finland and I don't even know where Jyväskylä is
Greetings from Espoo. You pronounced those tongue twisters incredibly well. Those aren't very easy even to native speakers. IN fact you pronounced all Finnish words much better than average English speaker who has learned Finnish. Our language isn't very easy to pronounce for a native English speaker because of the hard R's etc.
By the way, I saw the daylight first time in Joensuu long time ago.
I just left Helsinki...was staying off Mannerheimintie katu and the city center was just a few min away. Its not a normal winter this year. Moving there in the next year. Love Suomi!
You pronounce finnish really well! Have a great time in Finland! Tule koska vain takaisin!
The motor of mopoauto is usually even up to 500cm3.
Kiitos Videostasi
I was really suprised when you started speaking that good finnish, good job
epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydelläänsäkäänköhän
How the heck you pronoce that :D
WOW!
That Finnish is nearly perfect! And to learn it so well in only a couple of years?! My mind is blown 🤯
Thank you! I would love to hear more about Joensuu because I will study there soon. What sort of adventuring is there? I am looking forward to the lakes and forests.
What a nice video. Your tale about the old woman reminded me about this one guy who once paid for my train. I had ran to the train and noticed I had no cash when the ticket sales man came. The guy just paid for my ticket and said something I guess would translate to "it's cool", and we stood there in silence 'till my stop came.
You got it. We TRUST.
wellcome back!!
Todella taitavasti puhut suomenkieltä! Kiva kun viihdyit. ✌🏻
There are pickup trucks in Finland, they just aren't that common. Probably even rarer in cities. My parents had one when I was a kid, a chevrolet.
Gasoline is much more expensive in Finland, so I guess people will avoid high consumption cars if they don't really need them.
Love my summer cottage during summer solstice
My funniest memory of mopoautos, the moped cars, happened a few years ago when in my part of the town a slick looking businessman in a black suit used to drive one for a while. I imagined his usual BMW or Audi was under repair and thus he had needed to find some other means of personal transport in the meantime. Maybe the thing belonged to his son/daughter, who knows. It was a hilarious sight, nonetheless.
Tervettuloa Suomeen uudelleen❣️🇫🇮
we love, when someone tries to speak finnish like this :D
We don't look kindly onto or accept appreciation but this broke down my barrier of false humidity. thank you!
Humidity? Kosteus? 🤔
mämmi is actually rye malt and flour which is baked in the oven to sweeten it via maillard reactions. so not far from rye bread, but a bit different.
The midsummer bonfires are a thing in Bavaria Germany too.
You speak Finnish so well! wow.
Rye bread is something that you either hate or learn to yearn.
mopo/ mopoauto age is 15. A mopo is as he said a 50cc, but most teens with a mopo are as we call it "jonne" and make their mopeds go faster, and especially in small towns or suburbs you wont find a legal moped. And stunting with mopeds or motorcycles is also very big here.
Kiitos for my Fazer 💕💕
Wow, you speak excellent Finnish, very impressive!
Its interesting how when you speak finnish you have "umms" in between when native soeaker would say "öö" :D your accent is beautiful, and pronounciation is very solid, one of the best and fluent Ive heard!!
Midsommer bonfire are common in all nordic countries.
Finland and Scandinavian in general is the best country respectively has the best countries ever.😍
I'll have to learn some Finnish language, and practice. I grew up in Chicago, but now live in Arcata Calif. Always loved to travel and backpack wilderness areas of US. Think i would love the nature in Finland, and of course the Finnish people. I would greatly appreciate the quiet and the reserveness, although im gregareous, but i would learn.
Oh, so you went to Kuokkala? What did you think about the "hole" statue?
:grins: So true about the solidity of friendship with a Finn once you have proven your metal, so to speak, and you have their trust. That is a very special thing. Another very special, foodie, thing are Karjalanpiirakka ... they are so delicious!
Sadly for me, my aim of moving to Finland to stay has been detonated by Brexit - the vote alone shredded the Pound and that sank the house purchase I had underway at the time (in Riihimäki in fact, pretty much next door to Hyvinkää). And now hope is gone of escaping British shores for the 'snowy North' ... maybe time for a long holiday there tho' ... :).
That story of the kind lady on the bus was very touching indeed.
Epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkäänköhän? … is that longest Finnsih word build so far which he said.
Meaning about like 'I wonder if not even with his/her disorganization non-causing ability?' :)
It's not really used anywhere, it's an artificial (yet technically sound) word. I once managed to ask that in a Fb message to my cousin talking about a 3rd person :)
It's based on the possibility to derive new words from already existing derivations for very, very long chain. Like English can make from that word organ. Well, more like Latin & French already did a great part of that work.
But in real life compounds (like laptop from lap + top) are the longest used words in Finnish. More than 2 can be connected. Then Finnish is not making much longer words than Swedish or German, who use the same principle. But the core words in Finnish tend to be 2 syllable long, when in English, Swedish & German they are often 1 syllable long. And a few derivational elements are longer than one syllable long, which is a bit cumbersome. (compare Latin -ation - well, the -at- comes from a verb, but in English it doesn't show).
Numbers should be written together in Finnish, like kaksikymmentäyksi - 21 (yksi = 1, kaksi = 2), spoken is easier: kakskytyks. So because this can carry on theoretically forever, because what's the biggest number? Not found yet, but it's close to infinity. So you can always add one more number - and all that should be written together.
BUT - in English the chemical compounds should be written together, as compound words, if not in code form. So you can actually build English words which are minutes long to say. There's a TH-cam video where one crazy Russian (or Ukrainian) actually reads such a word. There's likely a practical limit how complex chemical mixes you can make, so the compounds are not as close to infinite as numbers. But long they can be!
i cant wait to move there for school and to enjoy life!!!!
Wow! Great accomplishment in Finnish :)
U nail it!! When you can say kokoo koko kokko kokoon thing and explained its mean, then you can speak Finnish 💪😎😂
And word "no niin"
How do you guys learn such good Finnish in a short period of time. I cannot understand that. You must have a serious work ethic.
Colombia here!!!
I'm from Michigan I'm watching
Well, dogs ARE the best people, why wouldn't we love doggos?
In Espoo is a villa owned by Mohammed Al-Fayed, and so on. On the water, it´s more expensive.
Nice, owning a Mökki near Joensuu as a foreigner :) Lived the whole last winter there. Beautiful landscapes! Being there in summertime twice as well. Living in Jyväskylä now. Nice parallels. Living for 3 months in this city now. Interested in Espoo and Helsinki as well.
As you took the bus from jyväskylä south over a bridge, you don't mean Säynätsalo or not that far south?
ruisleipä is rye bread in english also "dont eat the turkish pepper" ? are they really that bad to foreigners?
Финны пожалуй самый добрый и цивилизованный народ.
Люблю этих людей =)
You speak nice Finnish
trust is a good point, but if ya fail that trust its almost impossible to reclaim.
That's a great word! Epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydelläänsäkäänköhänkö = I wonder if it's really possible even with his/her unintentional urge to anti-unorganizationalize.
You spoke good finnish👍
Good points in this video but a few thing the editor should have fact checked and added to the video as a correction. But still good video.
Where in Finland you have your finnish roots?
last time i went to oulunkylä i almost got killed by speed head hobo with wrench and paint brush and had to run like 2km becouse he thought i stole his phone :D
Plz come back. You seem like a guy that would make migration look good again
Impressive pronunciation this guy has!
Estonians and Finns understand each other on an elementary level in both directions. Yes, that takes some time, but still. Genetically proven that Estonians and Finns were the same nation 2500 years ago. Estonians learn Finnish swift, and Finns learn Estonian ideally.
I live in Hyvinkää
Nordic winter isn’t cool. In England we have a black pudding but never had it or blood sausage. I love the aposolte trust and directness. Sorry I can’t spell. The summer celebration I’ve done in Germany.
Well, already the first sentence is wrong. Always have at least a bag of them.. They are THE BEST thing ever invented. :)
Espoo my cousin lives there
i love this as a finn
Finland's ranking is dropping at a breakneck pace. Education had been independent in schools. Now Politicians and this senior officials make themselves important and, in their own opinion now, “invent” good new methods and projects to make the system more efficient. The teaching is now mixed up. The ranking will drop drastically.
Hyvinkää is the best!
I have lived in Finland since 1974 ! and it's great ! So if any forigner living Finland complains about it, Then go to where you feel ok! SUOMI , SAUNA, SISU; SIBELIUS
Suomi mainittu torilla tavataan :)
It is moped car and you het it or just moped at are of 15 and Everyone in Finland has had moped (exept in big cities)
Suomi on paras maa maailmassa 🇫🇮❤️
Sweden has the bonfires too, but for 1st of May, not midsummer. And I won't go more into the Swedish midsummer tradition 😅
Turkish pepper is really tasty
You speak Finnish well for only being there for such a short time