Unfortunately, there aren't many listening comprehensions for beginners, if I don't count talking about weather or similar weird and uncommon topics. Your channel is an exception that you make from time to time videos which are well suitable for beginner. I appreciate it, I love it! Thanks.
I really prefer this way of learning because I’ve never been a grammar person. I always thought it was hard, boring and often difficult to understand. I'm using your videos as a complementary to the other resources I'm using for learning Finnish. Thank you for doing this! Hyvää kiitos! :)
This is exactly what I need to hear! I had a feeling that learning grammar was actually going to impede my learning. I’m so happy that I don’t need to bury my head in grammar to learn Finnish.
This video is so perfect for beginners! I love your channel but most videos are too difficult for me. I think You should do more videos like this one, many people will be grateful
This is so true. I had the same problem in my Finnish 1 class and gave feedback to the language centre. Hope they make changes for the following years.
OK. You have my attention! I'm not going to stop learning grammar, because I feel the need for an understanding of how and why a language works the way it does (and especially Finnish!) However, I've known for a while that listening, especially when people are speaking puhekieli (which they always are!) is my weakest area, and I think that your approach may be exactly what I need for this. For what it's worth, my ability to speak Finnish is not too bad, although I tend to speak in kirjekieli because, rightly or wrongly, it's what I've learned.
Thanks for your comment! Yes indeed, I always say that if you love grammar, please continue studying it - just knowing that while it can help you understand how Finnish works, it won't actually make you understand or speak the real Finnish ;)
I would really like thank you for such great ideas you have. I’ve following you for few weeks and I can really see big improvements in my Finnish language. Kiitos paljon “
Thank you for these beginner videos. so far I understand a lot of the things you are saying in this video after watching it many times😁 Greeting from Sweden 🇸🇪
The problem i have with Finnish is when you try to look up a word the actual meaning is often clouded without knowledge of the grammar. It's hard to get a translation that's not just the infinitive of the verb and so instead of getting 'went' you just get 'to go' and then have to look up the grammar to see how the word is formed to see which version of the verb is being used. I find FINTWOL very useful for this but it's still very slow compared to more mainstream languages.
I know what you mean, I've had the same problem with other languages. That's why I try to translate my videos literally, meaning very bad English but you will directly see what the words mean ☺️
@@finnished It's a very good method - i actually prefer it. I don't need a perfect English translation because i can see exactly what you're trying to say and the way you write it gives a better impression of how the actual Finnish is phrased. Love the vids. You should encourage people to comment etc so you get put into the algorithm more often and get pushed to people learning Finnish! Thanks again.
Moi! I personally think finnish is a bit challenging (and I like it). In other to learn finnish I downloaded this app that teaches me random words but not the grammar structure. I get it when you say we should listen at least five times the same video to absorb the new vocabulary and eventually learn the language (agreed) but I guess it would be interesting to know the basic rule, I don’t know but it might help us to create new phrases. I love your channel btw.
Thanks for your comment! The way this method works is that your brain absorbs not only the phrases I use but the structure, so you will eventually be able to form your own phrases - I've experienced it myself several times when learning languages :)
thanks for your great video......we do say it again and again...... there is nothing insane is slow speaking.......it is approved by linguists, that slow speaking improves our oral skills that are deeply hidden in our brain......it is in our inconscience.......haven't you known it? That is the reason (one of them) why we have chosen finnish language to study.......why we have chosen Finland to live.......
Suomen kielessä perus koulun kielioppi on tärkeää. Nyt opiskelen ruotsia ja ymmärrän että ruotsin kielessä kielioppi on, ehkä, samaa kuin englannin kielessä. Mutta suomi on täysin erilainen kieli.
I'm anxious about having the mental ability to learn this language...I know the best way is to listen and speak to people, but I've not a great speaker and struggle with even so much as small talk in languages I'm fluent in 😅 But I appreciate the encouragement. Paljon kiitos 😊
The best thing in this method is that you can skip speaking in the beginning and focus only on understanding - for more info see this video: th-cam.com/video/ZEpr1HAX12s/w-d-xo.html&lc=UgzqpxFRg0CAE2-M-RN4AaABAg
Moi. Hope you're having a good weekend. Part of your video was/is in my last video about me trying to practice my Finn. I linked your channel in my description.
@@finnished Asun Japanissa, joten internet on ainoa tapa, jolla äänesi on selkeä ja kaunis 40 vuotta sitten halusin oppia suomea norjasta ruotsiksi suomen kieleen ja sitten suomesta karjalan kieleen Karjal - suomi Raija Pyödi PDF suomesta karjalaan ei ole PDF:ssä, mutta suomenkielisten sanojen haulla voidaan oppia molemmat ja koska ne ovat lähellä, voit oppia eron ja on monia sanoja, jotka eivät ole suomenkielisiä muista kielistä karjalaiset voivat ymmärtää suomea Pidän karjalan kielestä eniten
Kiitos paljon, mä olen oppinut sinulta paljon 😊 Tehdä, alottaa, opiskella, halua, olla, pystyä, oppia, puhua, tietää, kysyä, tulla, saada, jumittua, pitää, päästä, kunnella, ymmärtää , ...
FinnishPod101 has a lot of good audio. My husband even had one of the exact conversations with his mom one day. Ovatko verbit: olla ymmärtää ja kuulla? I always confuse kuulla and kuunnella. Kiitos videosta!
Thanks! FinnishPod101 could be good for learning grammar but they speak standard language that no one uses in real life situations :) Great you've got one verb right there! Kuulla = to hear Kuunnella = to listen
Umm I don't quite understand the grammar point of jumittuneita, I found out that the original form is jumittua obviously, but how did it change to jumittuneita? Because that word isn’t in the dictionary and I cannot figure out what form is that.
Yes indeed, so the basic word is 'jumittunut', which is a noun made of the verb 'jumittua'. Then it's in plural (jumittuneet) and in partitive (jumittuneita). Vakuuttuneita is exaclty the same thing :)
So I've been in Finland for many years and can understand nearly all of this, but why is it I can't construct my own Finnish sentences? Or if I do, they are unintelligible to Finns.
You need to get over 'the wall' as I call it and force yourself to speak. At first it's super hard and you need to think a lot to form a sentence but it will get easier! Listening a lot of Finnish will help you with that, because you start to repeat the sentences you hear in your head 😊
@Leon F. I was there, it was painful. It maybe different for different people but it was these videos that was the key I needed to start talking. I'd been saving words for years but couldn't string them together. The wall is huge, no doubt about it. Let it be known that my Finnish is poor and never correct, but everyone seems to understand what I am saying. One thing I tell others though, is learn each sound of each letter really, really well. Do not short cut this. A as in car, B as in bear, C as in Sair (S-air), D as in dare, E as in air ... jne (et cetera) At least if the sounds are correct (pronunciation), then you don't have to repeat yourself as much and beat yourself up for seemingly not being understood. I wanted to return a library book today. It was closed and there was no after-hours drop box. The library manager was taking care of last minute things outside. I fumbled through a topic I am unfamiliar with, but he understood me and I understood him and clarified it. He probably spoke very good English, but the funny thing is, the more I speak Finnish, the more people are speaking Finnish back to me. They used to always reply in English. In fact I cannot remember the last time someone spoke English to me
Hello, I am interested in learning Finnish (especially more in the future; because right now I am mainly focused on Russian for about one more year). So I have not yet begun my Finnish language learning journey but I just wanted to say thank you anyway because I see that there are still not many video resources for learning Finnish. I'm sure if there were more available, I'm sure more people would want to learn it! For me, you do not appear to be talking too slowly at all. Hehehe. So yes I was wondering if you plan to make some videos to explain at least some of these strange grammatical cases in future? Because I think I'm unlikely to seriously commit to studying Finnish until or unless I can learn the grammar (by video) somewhere. And by grammar I mean the noun declensions, no so much the verb conjugations. Is there an online video course I can do for example?
I'm happy to hear you are planning to start studying Finnish at some point! To answer your question, this natural learning method relies heavily on listening and understanding, and I don't recommend starting with grammar. I think all you need to know to start is that the Finnish nouns are conjugated in cases which is why we don't have prepositions. Understanding those cases is probably the only grammatical thing I would learn first, and then just listen to these slow videos :)
@@finnished Fair enough. Basically you suggest to learn by 'copying'. That's precisely the way that children learn. What I know from Russian is that some specific verbs use some cases exclusively, so I suppose you are right, it doesn't help too much knowing how to decline them... I'm also considering learning Japanese (and there is a lot more material available on that). I've always been interested in that language. I'd rather not study them together. I prefer to learn languages completely separately. I'm not sure which one to start first! Hahaha. I'm very tempted to swap to Finnish actually... Finnish I only got to hear about when I was already in my 30's. But I think Finnish is the one language exception that I like with relatively few speakers. I just want to encourage you to keep making videos. I am sure I will watch them all (sooner or later). Maybe I can try to learn Finnish a differnt way? Would you suggest diving straight in to watch a Finnish TV series? I don't ever intend to master Finnish or anything. But it would be nice to learn some basics.... patience... My [new] TH-cam channel is devoted to language-learning techniques by the way... and I'll review some books, TV series. I hope you can take a look!
how do you think, how much time (approximately) does it take to learn new foreign language once moved to another country without any knowledge of it? we know that the answers to this question may differ (children-adults, high rate of motivation or nothing, job or now job, anything else)......... but the "common" or "general" time surely exist for gradation of this process...... suppose that your experience and education allow to make such conclusions.......
As you say, it really depends, also on how much time you put into acquiring the language but also on your own native language. I once met a person who moved to Finland without ever studying it and after 6 months could have a decent conversation in Finnish - she played in an orchestra and spoke Finnish every day with her bandmates, so she was very motivated. Another exchange student who lived with a Finnish family spoke amazing Finnish after 9 months. For 'easier' languages it takes less than that. I'd also say that it depends on what your metrics are. You can talk with friends after 6 months but probably can't give a presentation at work.
Help-ompi Finnish supi stui suomea in slowtime ! Yritän oppia sanoja leikkimällä sanoilla huumoria huomio !Huomio! on nope us noll ata a-set-uk-set To is to) playback no pe us speed ,snail pace tai 2 freaky fast
In general I very much like your videos. However, I am not convinced that speaking "super slowly" helps. While you win understandability on a word-by-word basis, you lose the normal connection of words, the loss of characters (not pronouncing parts of a word), and the flow of speech. My suspicion is that real beginners don't need as much super slow speech as much as simpler content. So the words you use should be attuned to the level of the listener. Speaking slowly makes your speech sound ..... off. I do not wish to offend you, but I just want to put my thought out there. As I am just a beginner, I will stop talking now.
Not for me. I listened to this video at 0.75 speed so I can really grasp each word, writing them down and making notes as I go. Then I took it up to 100% speed. Then moved on to faster videos. This is the accepted way to learn a musical instrument, and isn't speaking like improvising a solo, and conversation like a duet?
I think it is quite ok to listen to speed like this. Finnish pronunciation is not the same as English. You don’t need to connect words. Actually the principle of Finnish pronunciation is to pronounce every syllable clearly. There is no liaison in Finnish. If you slow down quick speaker s speech, you will still find every vowel or consonant is pronounced clearly. For example, outo is pronounced as o u to, not “ou” as in English “out”.
super slow learning is useless. Not enough stimulation on brain. I tried many years in school. I found the faster the input, the better absorption will be.
Unfortunately, there aren't many listening comprehensions for beginners, if I don't count talking about weather or similar weird and uncommon topics. Your channel is an exception that you make from time to time videos which are well suitable for beginner. I appreciate it, I love it! Thanks.
I really prefer this way of learning because I’ve never been a grammar person. I always thought it was hard, boring and often difficult to understand. I'm using your videos as a complementary to the other resources I'm using for learning Finnish.
Thank you for doing this! Hyvää kiitos! :)
Thank you for your comment! I'm exactly like you with grammar :) Tsemppiä opintoihin!
This is exactly what I need to hear! I had a feeling that learning grammar was actually going to impede my learning. I’m so happy that I don’t need to bury my head in grammar to learn Finnish.
This video is so perfect for beginners! I love your channel but most videos are too difficult for me. I think You should do more videos like this one, many people will be grateful
Good to know! You should check out the Beginners playlist for more slow videos :)
This is so true. I had the same problem in my Finnish 1 class and gave feedback to the language centre. Hope they make changes for the following years.
OK. You have my attention! I'm not going to stop learning grammar, because I feel the need for an understanding of how and why a language works the way it does (and especially Finnish!) However, I've known for a while that listening, especially when people are speaking puhekieli (which they always are!) is my weakest area, and I think that your approach may be exactly what I need for this. For what it's worth, my ability to speak Finnish is not too bad, although I tend to speak in kirjekieli because, rightly or wrongly, it's what I've learned.
Thanks for your comment! Yes indeed, I always say that if you love grammar, please continue studying it - just knowing that while it can help you understand how Finnish works, it won't actually make you understand or speak the real Finnish ;)
I would really like thank you for such great ideas you have. I’ve following you for few weeks and I can really see big improvements in my Finnish language. Kiitos paljon “
That's awesome! I'm always happy to hear that my videos are helpful :)
Thank you for these beginner videos. so far I understand a lot of the things you are saying in this video after watching it many times😁
Greeting from Sweden 🇸🇪
That's awesome! Good luck with your studies :)
Suomen kielen syntymisestä videon olisi kiinnostavaa minulle! Kiitos videosta, mä katsoin sen 1.5 nopeammin ja se toimi ihan hienosti.
Sun videot auttaa paljon, kiitti!
Kiitos!!
It's working! It's working!! 😆
The problem i have with Finnish is when you try to look up a word the actual meaning is often clouded without knowledge of the grammar. It's hard to get a translation that's not just the infinitive of the verb and so instead of getting 'went' you just get 'to go' and then have to look up the grammar to see how the word is formed to see which version of the verb is being used.
I find FINTWOL very useful for this but it's still very slow compared to more mainstream languages.
I know what you mean, I've had the same problem with other languages. That's why I try to translate my videos literally, meaning very bad English but you will directly see what the words mean ☺️
@@finnished It's a very good method - i actually prefer it. I don't need a perfect English translation because i can see exactly what you're trying to say and the way you write it gives a better impression of how the actual Finnish is phrased.
Love the vids. You should encourage people to comment etc so you get put into the algorithm more often and get pushed to people learning Finnish!
Thanks again.
@@thorhbar1255 hei, minulla on saman ongelman, mutta yritän kannattaa kieli.net.........sometimes it is very useful
Moi!
I personally think finnish is a bit challenging (and I like it). In other to learn finnish I downloaded this app that teaches me random words but not the grammar structure.
I get it when you say we should listen at least five times the same video to absorb the new vocabulary and eventually learn the language (agreed) but I guess it would be interesting to know the basic rule, I don’t know but it might help us to create new phrases.
I love your channel btw.
Thanks for your comment! The way this method works is that your brain absorbs not only the phrases I use but the structure, so you will eventually be able to form your own phrases - I've experienced it myself several times when learning languages :)
thanks for your great video......we do say it again and again......
there is nothing insane is slow speaking.......it is approved by linguists, that slow speaking improves our oral skills that are deeply hidden in our brain......it is in our inconscience.......haven't you known it?
That is the reason (one of them) why we have chosen finnish language to study.......why we have chosen Finland to live.......
Suomen kielessä perus koulun kielioppi on tärkeää. Nyt opiskelen ruotsia ja ymmärrän että ruotsin kielessä kielioppi on, ehkä, samaa kuin englannin kielessä. Mutta suomi on täysin erilainen kieli.
I'm anxious about having the mental ability to learn this language...I know the best way is to listen and speak to people, but I've not a great speaker and struggle with even so much as small talk in languages I'm fluent in 😅
But I appreciate the encouragement. Paljon kiitos 😊
The best thing in this method is that you can skip speaking in the beginning and focus only on understanding - for more info see this video: th-cam.com/video/ZEpr1HAX12s/w-d-xo.html&lc=UgzqpxFRg0CAE2-M-RN4AaABAg
opin verbejä „jumittua” ja „päntätä”, kiitos
Moi. Hope you're having a good weekend. Part of your video was/is in my last video about me trying to practice my Finn. I linked your channel in my description.
Moi! I just watched your video, it's really amazing :D
@@finnished Thanks. I'm sure I can make whole videos about the faces I make trying to read Finnish. lol
Tosi hyvä että puhut puhekieltä. Tätä pitääkin nimenomaan opetella.
She's using spoken Finnish so this is perfect!
Kiitos paljon!
@@finnished Asun Japanissa, joten internet on ainoa tapa, jolla äänesi on selkeä ja kaunis
40 vuotta sitten halusin oppia suomea norjasta ruotsiksi suomen kieleen ja sitten suomesta karjalan kieleen Karjal - suomi Raija Pyödi PDF suomesta karjalaan ei ole PDF:ssä, mutta suomenkielisten sanojen haulla voidaan oppia molemmat ja koska ne ovat lähellä, voit oppia eron ja on monia sanoja, jotka eivät ole suomenkielisiä muista kielistä karjalaiset voivat ymmärtää suomea Pidän karjalan kielestä eniten
Thank you so much!
Moi! Kiitos for your video! Tell me please. what are you thinking about ANKI ? Do you recomend that sistem ?
Kiitos paljon, mä olen oppinut sinulta paljon 😊
Tehdä, alottaa, opiskella, halua, olla, pystyä, oppia, puhua, tietää, kysyä, tulla, saada, jumittua, pitää, päästä, kunnella, ymmärtää
, ...
Kiitos, mahtava kuulla!
FinnishPod101 has a lot of good audio. My husband even had one of the exact conversations with his mom one day.
Ovatko verbit: olla ymmärtää ja kuulla? I always confuse kuulla and kuunnella.
Kiitos videosta!
Thanks! FinnishPod101 could be good for learning grammar but they speak standard language that no one uses in real life situations :)
Great you've got one verb right there!
Kuulla = to hear
Kuunnella = to listen
Any tips for listening skills?
Moi! Se oli hauskaa etsiä näitä verbejä!
Kiitos paljon 🤗
Nää kolme verbit siis "tietää + haluta + olla"?
That's right!!
Thanks again
it would be interesting to know about languages' creation........also.......if you do have some time and any abilities to tell us about it!
really helpfull vedio
Minä pidän siitä.
Umm I don't quite understand the grammar point of jumittuneita, I found out that the original form is jumittua obviously, but how did it change to jumittuneita? Because that word isn’t in the dictionary and I cannot figure out what form is that.
Is it partitive of jumittuneet?
As well as vakuuttuneita
Yes indeed, so the basic word is 'jumittunut', which is a noun made of the verb 'jumittua'. Then it's in plural (jumittuneet) and in partitive (jumittuneita). Vakuuttuneita is exaclty the same thing :)
👍🏻👍🏻
So I've been in Finland for many years and can understand nearly all of this, but why is it I can't construct my own Finnish sentences? Or if I do, they are unintelligible to Finns.
You need to get over 'the wall' as I call it and force yourself to speak. At first it's super hard and you need to think a lot to form a sentence but it will get easier! Listening a lot of Finnish will help you with that, because you start to repeat the sentences you hear in your head 😊
@Leon F. I was there, it was painful. It maybe different for different people but it was these videos that was the key I needed to start talking. I'd been saving words for years but couldn't string them together. The wall is huge, no doubt about it. Let it be known that my Finnish is poor and never correct, but everyone seems to understand what I am saying. One thing I tell others though, is learn each sound of each letter really, really well. Do not short cut this. A as in car, B as in bear, C as in Sair (S-air), D as in dare, E as in air ... jne (et cetera)
At least if the sounds are correct (pronunciation), then you don't have to repeat yourself as much and beat yourself up for seemingly not being understood. I wanted to return a library book today. It was closed and there was no after-hours drop box. The library manager was taking care of last minute things outside. I fumbled through a topic I am unfamiliar with, but he understood me and I understood him and clarified it.
He probably spoke very good English, but the funny thing is, the more I speak Finnish, the more people are speaking Finnish back to me. They used to always reply in English. In fact I cannot remember the last time someone spoke English to me
Preach!
Hello, I am interested in learning Finnish (especially more in the future; because right now I am mainly focused on Russian for about one more year). So I have not yet begun my Finnish language learning journey but I just wanted to say thank you anyway because I see that there are still not many video resources for learning Finnish. I'm sure if there were more available, I'm sure more people would want to learn it! For me, you do not appear to be talking too slowly at all. Hehehe.
So yes I was wondering if you plan to make some videos to explain at least some of these strange grammatical cases in future? Because I think I'm unlikely to seriously commit to studying Finnish until or unless I can learn the grammar (by video) somewhere. And by grammar I mean the noun declensions, no so much the verb conjugations. Is there an online video course I can do for example?
I'm happy to hear you are planning to start studying Finnish at some point! To answer your question, this natural learning method relies heavily on listening and understanding, and I don't recommend starting with grammar. I think all you need to know to start is that the Finnish nouns are conjugated in cases which is why we don't have prepositions. Understanding those cases is probably the only grammatical thing I would learn first, and then just listen to these slow videos :)
@@finnished Fair enough. Basically you suggest to learn by 'copying'. That's precisely the way that children learn. What I know from Russian is that some specific verbs use some cases exclusively, so I suppose you are right, it doesn't help too much knowing how to decline them... I'm also considering learning Japanese (and there is a lot more material available on that). I've always been interested in that language. I'd rather not study them together. I prefer to learn languages completely separately. I'm not sure which one to start first! Hahaha. I'm very tempted to swap to Finnish actually...
Finnish I only got to hear about when I was already in my 30's. But I think Finnish is the one language exception that I like with relatively few speakers. I just want to encourage you to keep making videos. I am sure I will watch them all (sooner or later). Maybe I can try to learn Finnish a differnt way? Would you suggest diving straight in to watch a Finnish TV series? I don't ever intend to master Finnish or anything. But it would be nice to learn some basics.... patience...
My [new] TH-cam channel is devoted to language-learning techniques by the way... and I'll review some books, TV series. I hope you can take a look!
how do you think, how much time (approximately) does it take
to learn new foreign language once moved to another country without any knowledge of it?
we know that the answers to this question may differ (children-adults, high rate of motivation or nothing, job or now job, anything else).........
but the "common" or "general" time surely exist for gradation of this process......
suppose that your experience and education allow to make such conclusions.......
As you say, it really depends, also on how much time you put into acquiring the language but also on your own native language. I once met a person who moved to Finland without ever studying it and after 6 months could have a decent conversation in Finnish - she played in an orchestra and spoke Finnish every day with her bandmates, so she was very motivated. Another exchange student who lived with a Finnish family spoke amazing Finnish after 9 months. For 'easier' languages it takes less than that. I'd also say that it depends on what your metrics are. You can talk with friends after 6 months but probably can't give a presentation at work.
suppose these words are: olla-verbi, tämä+nämä, se, kieli.......3 but 4 words.....it seems.....
Yhdessa viikosa kuntelin taman videon kolmekymenta kerrat 🎉
Mahtavaa!!
Any tips for listening in finnish?
Drops the mic- past tense 😂
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Help-ompi Finnish supi stui suomea in slowtime ! Yritän oppia sanoja leikkimällä sanoilla huumoria huomio !Huomio! on nope us noll ata a-set-uk-set To is to) playback no pe us speed ,snail pace tai 2 freaky fast
haluta: mä haluun/sä haluut
tiedä: mä tiiän/sä tiiät/te tiiätte
Moi! Nepalista!
3:34 verban pitaisi olla 'ette oo (ole) vakuutetut', joo?
Mä käytän sanaa "vakuuttunut", ei "vakuutettu" - nää on kaks eri asiaa ;)
Mul, on, parempi kysymys kumpi tuli eka kana vai muna
What did you mean by drops the mic?
It's a joke after making the point that you've learned all the verb forms without realising or without studying the grammar :D
Solo 3? xD
io dico :
- tietää
- haluta
- olla
Esatto!!! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Lisäisin verbi laittaa
Haha ‘drip the mic’
Mielestäni ei ole V helppoa oppia nopeasti vain, jos olet V päässä ja on opittava, V koska kukaan ei puhu V langauge ja selviytyminen pot kii k V
👀
i heard mutta ja
In general I very much like your videos. However, I am not convinced that speaking "super slowly" helps. While you win understandability on a word-by-word basis, you lose the normal connection of words, the loss of characters (not pronouncing parts of a word), and the flow of speech. My suspicion is that real beginners don't need as much super slow speech as much as simpler content. So the words you use should be attuned to the level of the listener. Speaking slowly makes your speech sound ..... off. I do not wish to offend you, but I just want to put my thought out there. As I am just a beginner, I will stop talking now.
Not for me. I listened to this video at 0.75 speed so I can really grasp each word, writing them down and making notes as I go. Then I took it up to 100% speed. Then moved on to faster videos. This is the accepted way to learn a musical instrument, and isn't speaking like improvising a solo, and conversation like a duet?
I think it is quite ok to listen to speed like this. Finnish pronunciation is not the same as English. You don’t need to connect words. Actually the principle of Finnish pronunciation is to pronounce every syllable clearly. There is no liaison in Finnish. If you slow down quick speaker s speech, you will still find every vowel or consonant is pronounced clearly. For example, outo is pronounced as o u to, not “ou” as in English “out”.
As a hungarian I'm here to try to catch some similar words. There's the result:
vai - vagy -> or
me - mi -> we
Haha people always tell me that Finnish and Hungarian must be so similar because we're relatives, and I'm like "yeah, DISTANT relatives" :D
Every language learner needs grammar at some point...
Exactly - once they understand and speak the language and want to write it in the standard format ;)
i am a useless human being
😂
@@samiabakhtawar5882 what learning finnish does 😭
super slow learning is useless. Not enough stimulation on brain. I tried many years in school. I found the faster the input, the better absorption will be.