This explanation was in incredible. Profesional without unnecessary info, the right amount of examples and an actual exercise at the end! Kiitos paljon sulle, opettaja!
Excellent! Many years ago in Finland with only a few words, I had to cook for myself and the instructions were in Finnish and Swedish. I had an English-Finnish dictionary and thought "OK - just a matter of looking up the words" - oh no, it wasn't! Kiitoksia paljon!
Kiitos paljon sulle, opettaja! So far it has been the most useful lesson in a whole year trying to study finnish language. If you upload more lessons, I am pretty sure many people (including me) will be eternally grateful :)
Consonants gradations are due to the different types of syllables where the consonants lie, before and after the variations. In the words ending with open syllable, plosives change from strong grade to weak grade when attaching suffixes that consist in one consonant (-t, -n) or begin with two consonants (-ssa / -ssä, -sta / -stä and so on) because that single consonant or the first of two consonants closes the syllable. Kauppa > kaup/pa > kau/pas/sa In the words endings with close syllable plosives change (in one of the two stem) from weak grade to strong grade when attaching suffixes that change the base form in stem. Saapas > saa.pas > saap/paa- > saap/paas/sa So, in the declension of the words ending with open syllable we will see both weak and strong grade of the plosives, while in the words ending with close syllable the strong grade prevails, remaining the weak grade in nominative and partitive case. Paljon kiitoksiä kaikille lukijoille ja kommentoijillekin.
If you are interested in learning more Finnish on your own, check this Introductory Finnish Self Study course openlearning.aalto.fi/course/view.php?id=59
the best explanation untel now so far from other❤❤ thank you for sharing your materiels . Iwish that i can join your classes online or in hilsinki this summer pls unswer me ❤
Thank you mam for this video.iam learning finish language in online class but I am not at all getting the grammar portion.Because of your video I could get little bit .
Very, very useful. It helped understand this matter. So nouns with these ending musy always have the weak stem, is that correct to say? Kiitos! Greetings Argentiinasta
Thanks for the video! So I guess that the technology used to record the blackboard is a sovraposittion of two videos, right? But how is it actually possible ? cause the text should be visible to us in mirror mode (unreadable)
I need help! Your class was really useful,but it didn't help me with the reason I came here.I am studying finnish by myself,so I can't really guide me through my difficulties.I try building sentences by myself and then ask my finn friend to tell me whether it's correct or not. One day I tried to say "the boy's book has many words",then I wrote "Poikan kirja on monta sana" (I was trying to apply the genitive which I had just learned) but he said the correct way would be "Pojan kirjassa on monta sanaa",but he couldn't explain why "poika" becomes "pojan". Could you explain me,or maybe even make a video about that ? I really admire your culture and that's why I'm trying to learn it,but some things are quite hard to understand. Kiitos avusta!
Hi Alex, if you add a genitive ending -N to the word POIKA, K disappears: POIAN. Now you have 3 vowels -oia-. You have to change the middle vowel -i- to a consonant -j- in order to break the vowel row.
*poika : pojan* (boy; son) *aika : ajan* (time) but *taika : taian* (magic) So, the rule *i -> j* is lexical, it doesn't apply to word *taika* Notice syllables: *po+jan* *a+jan* *tai+an*
Great video, really explicit, but it's too noisy. Both image (the camera's seems to be not sensitive enough for such dark conditions) and audio (sounds like someone turned on the vacuum cleaner at 3:37)
This explanation was in incredible. Profesional without unnecessary info, the right amount of examples and an actual exercise at the end! Kiitos paljon sulle, opettaja!
Finally, learning Finnish doesn't have to feel like mastering the time-space continuum! Great video Aija!
space-time is not a continuum!
Excellent! Many years ago in Finland with only a few words, I had to cook for myself and the instructions were in Finnish and Swedish. I had an English-Finnish dictionary and thought "OK - just a matter of looking up the words" - oh no, it wasn't! Kiitoksia paljon!
Hei George! Good to hear that you found this useful. I have added some other grammar videos in TH-cam, so check those as well.
@@TheAijuli Hei Aija, se on hyvä uutinen, kiitos paljon!
very very useful and now i understand more clearly
kiitos! I wish I had a teacher like you
The only video that helped me understand this! Awesome!
The Best Teacher.
Kiitos paljon sulle, opettaja! So far it has been the most useful lesson in a whole year trying to study finnish language. If you upload more lessons, I am pretty sure many people (including me) will be eternally grateful :)
Consonants gradations are due to the different types of syllables where the consonants lie, before and after the variations.
In the words ending with open syllable, plosives change from strong grade to weak grade when attaching suffixes that consist in one consonant (-t, -n) or begin with two consonants (-ssa / -ssä, -sta / -stä and so on) because that single consonant or the first of two consonants closes the syllable.
Kauppa > kaup/pa > kau/pas/sa
In the words endings with close syllable plosives change (in one of the two stem) from weak grade to strong grade when attaching suffixes that change the base form in stem.
Saapas > saa.pas > saap/paa- > saap/paas/sa
So, in the declension of the words ending with open syllable we will see both weak and strong grade of the plosives, while in the words ending with close syllable the strong grade prevails, remaining the weak grade in nominative and partitive case.
Paljon kiitoksiä kaikille lukijoille ja kommentoijillekin.
I would love to hear or watch for more episodes like this. Crystal 💯
Kiitos! This is very well explained. This is Finnish consonant gradation in its simplest form! Thanks again!
WoW 🤩
This is very helpful as I have been struggling to understand kpt… kiitos paljon 🎉
Crystal clear.. may I request also for Sanatyypit.
Kiitos oiken paljon!
Kiitos paljon!
Very, very well explained!
Idk, I'm finnish and watching this I just think how on earth do some of you guys learn finnish... - I could never... respect!
A very helpful video, with great and clear explanations.Thank you.
amazing, no one has ever explained when I need KPT so well.
If you are interested in learning more Finnish on your own, check this Introductory Finnish Self Study course
openlearning.aalto.fi/course/view.php?id=59
Thank you for wonderful lesson opettaja . 😊 More videos please ! Kiitos paljon .
kiitos paljon ma'am , this is so useful. ive been struggling with kpt changes but this video helped me a lot >.
You explained this topic so well. I hope you will upload more videos please.😊😊
How to find the right suffixes or endings to be attached to the word?
You're built to teach, hats off to you..
Thank you so much for this amazing video, please keep on making more videos for us the struggling people 😅😅
Moi, great if you find it useful. Hope that learning Finnish won’t be a struggle but an interesting learning experience.
Tnx it helps a lot to us beginners..
This is very helpful! What a clear explanation. Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge.
Amazing graphics! And very well put!
The best teacher thank you for your effort
the best explanation untel now so far from other❤❤
thank you for sharing your materiels .
Iwish that i can join your classes online or in hilsinki this summer pls unswer me ❤
we need more such awesome finish grammer teaching videos
Very well explained. Now I understand it more..Thank you.
Kiitos Gracia! I´m glad to hear that you found it helpful.
Thank you mam for this video.iam learning finish language in online class but I am not at all getting the grammar portion.Because of your video I could get little bit .
one of the best explanation ... thanks , nice to see same sessions .
Aija Elg your unique what a explanation really thank you so much !
Kiitos paljon. Se oli tosi hyödyllinen.
Kiitos paljon. Tosi hyvää opettaja(hope got this one right 😁).. i very confused with consonant gradation now I understand very clearly.
This is incredibly useful thank you
Thanks for this video i learned something.
Are you making any more of these? :) It is very helpful.
Very clear kiitos paljon
Thank you so much for this amazing content! 💚
Its very perfect explaination
Kiitos ❤️
Incredible video!
Very, very useful. It helped understand this matter.
So nouns with these ending musy always have the weak stem, is that correct to say?
Kiitos! Greetings Argentiinasta
Kiitos paljon, Aija 😊
Keep on doing such a great job. Congratulations.
Ihana! Kiitos
Pretty much exactly like in Estonian :D
Kiitos! This helped a lot!
Amazing thanks
But how do you know when to use which one?
So useful!!!
The n is for possessive "ukan" and for plural "Tyton"?
More lesson please🙏 gradation with nouns
Loistavaa, kiitos!! :)
oh my hod this was amazing
Kiitos paljon. Se on hyödyllinen.
useful and easy
Kiitos paljon!
kiitos paljon
Kittos paljon😊
More videos pleaseeeeeee
Thanks for the video!
So I guess that the technology used to record the blackboard is a sovraposittion of two videos, right? But how is it actually possible ? cause the text should be visible to us in mirror mode (unreadable)
Yeah, I have the same question
Tämä on hyvä!
you are Great Thank you
I need help! Your class was really useful,but it didn't help me with the reason I came here.I am studying finnish by myself,so I can't really guide me through my difficulties.I try building sentences by myself and then ask my finn friend to tell me whether it's correct or not. One day I tried to say "the boy's book has many words",then I wrote "Poikan kirja on monta sana" (I was trying to apply the genitive which I had just learned) but he said the correct way would be "Pojan kirjassa on monta sanaa",but he couldn't explain why "poika" becomes "pojan". Could you explain me,or maybe even make a video about that ? I really admire your culture and that's why I'm trying to learn it,but some things are quite hard to understand. Kiitos avusta!
Hi Alex, if you add a genitive ending -N to the word POIKA, K disappears: POIAN. Now you have 3 vowels -oia-. You have to change the middle vowel -i- to a consonant -j- in order to break the vowel row.
@@TheAijuli could you give me some words examples where this also happens ?
@@crocodilion As far as I know, it's anomalous and there are no words where the same thing happens. So it's better just to commit it to memory.
@@Pakanahymni thanks man! I've been studying it for sometime now and I didn't come across this again
*poika : pojan* (boy; son)
*aika : ajan* (time)
but
*taika : taian* (magic)
So, the rule *i -> j* is lexical, it doesn't apply to word *taika*
Notice syllables:
*po+jan*
*a+jan*
*tai+an*
very nice ,thanks hope you will upload more videos
Hyvä!👏
Kiitos
Ole hyvä!
Clinically executed
Superb
Kiitos Bimala! I'm happy to hear that you find this video useful. I will add more videos such as Finnish Sentence Types an The Simple Past Tense.
Awesome
Title CCV means???
consonant + consonant + vowel -> -lle, -lta, -sta, etc.
Great video, really explicit, but it's too noisy. Both image (the camera's seems to be not sensitive enough for such dark conditions) and audio (sounds like someone turned on the vacuum cleaner at 3:37)
Cool.
Kittos paljon
Are you the lady in this video?
why Hatut =Hattu but not Hadu similarly takit=takki not tai. kiitos
t varies with d and tt varies with t / k varies with 0 and kk with k: äiti-äidit, tyttö-tytöt / laki 'a law' -lait, takki-takit
You need to do it backwards. The rule was tt-t so you need to apply t-tt, not t-d. .
Kiitos paljon!