Introduction to Finnish phonology

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 312

  • @coolbrotherf127
    @coolbrotherf127 5 лет назад +479

    Now I'll be able to read Finnish without being able to understand a word of it.

    • @supplanterdefender3978
      @supplanterdefender3978 4 года назад +19

      theacp127 That’s exactly why I started studying foreign language. It was always an interest of mine to learn new ways of speaking and pronunciation, and I am now currently working on over 20 different languages for phonology!

    • @legendmitchell3040
      @legendmitchell3040 3 года назад +2

      I know Im kind of randomly asking but do anybody know of a good site to watch new series online?

    • @tomasbeltran04050
      @tomasbeltran04050 4 месяца назад

      Ðat's a nice achievement, actually

  • @ribozyme2899
    @ribozyme2899 5 лет назад +374

    It's a nice contrast.
    Finnish: No letter can be silent.
    English: Every letter can be silent.

    • @greasyfingers9250
      @greasyfingers9250 5 лет назад +33

      English is an absolute mess of a language

    • @Omio9999
      @Omio9999 5 лет назад +31

      I thought "every letter can be silent" was more French?

    • @ribozyme2899
      @ribozyme2899 5 лет назад +17

      @@Omio9999 Yes, French also has some silent letters, but its pronunciation rules are a bit more consistent than the English ones. Most silent letters are h and ends of words. Of course, it has things like "eau" = [o:], where I don't know what letters count as silent.

    • @toma00
      @toma00 5 лет назад +10

      @@ribozyme2899 All of them are silent, or all of them count as [o:], you choose. We French people thrive on confusing people

    • @ribozyme2899
      @ribozyme2899 5 лет назад +4

      @@toma00 Yeah, I noticed ;). French is also the source of, like, half of all cases of silent letters in English.

  • @juliusg.7074
    @juliusg.7074 5 лет назад +88

    Once a guy commented under one of your videos "Why dont you give up on religion and concentrate your life on what you are good in: programming."
    And in my head I had like a trillion arguments why his 'suggestion' was stupid, but you just replied with "Because it is not meaningless to me"
    And i thought that was such a easy, disarming and brilliant answer so that I still remember this.

    • @ImperatorGrausam
      @ImperatorGrausam 4 года назад +13

      I read this comment and found it quite insightful. But to me, my hobbies do mean something even from a spiritual perspective. I am quite religious and fond of both linguistics and retrocomputing/retrogaming (which incidentally this channel focuses on), but I'm not Christian. I'm a Muslim. To me, the Islamic perspective is that things that make you happy but have nothing to do with spirit are still important to the spirit. One cannot have complete happiness, at least to me, without having little things like hobbies to enjoy and friends to talk to who share your feelings and interests. I think you have to realize.. "carnal" happiness in order to realize the greater, and spiritual happiness.
      tl;dr I think hobbies are still important for the spirit as the spirit cannot exist without the flesh.

    • @whiteingale
      @whiteingale Месяц назад

      but why buty why but why but why but why?

  • @duuqnd
    @duuqnd 5 лет назад +92

    OH NO, My Swedishness has been revealed! I'll never be able to talk to a Finnish person ever again!

  • @ENTL37
    @ENTL37 5 лет назад +73

    I like these linguistic videos for a change even though I came for the tech stuff

  • @marymills3581
    @marymills3581 3 года назад +28

    I'm learning finnish now. it makes a lot of sense, I think, as a language. but there's so much to learn that I find it a little overwhelming. thanks for your video, it's helped!

    • @fancyndzefu7798
      @fancyndzefu7798 Год назад

      How much have you progressed with your Finnish language? Any tips for absolute beginners?

  • @Bisqwit
    @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +67

    Yay, I have seen this before!

    • @BenGras
      @BenGras 5 лет назад +6

      Are you replying to your own video :)

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +39

      No, I am _commenting_ on my own video!

    • @BenGras
      @BenGras 5 лет назад +3

      @@Bisqwit touché!!

    • @tonym5857
      @tonym5857 5 лет назад

      Each language is different, but yours is really complicate. I apreciate your explication. Regards.

  • @rahadian364
    @rahadian364 5 лет назад +12

    2 Finnish youtubers that are my fav, Hydraulic Press Channel and YOU!
    Glad we have the same interests, linguistics and programming :D

  • @Consolethinks
    @Consolethinks 5 лет назад +33

    ŋ is an allophone only sound in Hungarian as well, but instead of /k/ we use it when a /g/ sound comes after it, for example ing /iŋɡ/ (otherwise it's just /n/.) In addition, Hungarian has plenty of fricatives and affricates, for example the /ʃ/ and /ʒ/ are often used (/ʃ/ is as frequently used as /s/), and /c͡ç/ and /ɟ͡ʝ/ are 2 sounds that are very hard to pronounce for non native speakers because they rarely appear in other (European) languages. I am also interested in learning some Finnish, so thanks for the video!

    • @zorggn
      @zorggn 5 лет назад +2

      Correct me if i'm wrong, but wouldn't it be a bit more correct to say that in Hungarian, we use the ŋ allophone in both cases of when either a /k/ or /g/ follows an /n/? Example: The word inkább /iŋka:b:/ also behaves like this, with my pronounciation, at least, as well as engem /ɛŋgɛm/.

    • @Consolethinks
      @Consolethinks 5 лет назад +1

      @@zorggn You are right. I didn't notice since it's second nature to me.

  • @metadaat5791
    @metadaat5791 5 лет назад +21

    Finnish is so regular! Whereas in English you could write "ghoti" and taken from the pronunciations of the words "touGH", "wOmen", "excepTIon" you could say it's pronounced as the word "fish". I mean, in actual English you wouldn't, but the language pronunciation is so riddled with exceptions, it might just as well be :-)
    Your conclusion in the video is spot on, btw. As you where explaining the phonololologies it was immediately clear, so that is why Finnish English accent always sounds like that. Also it explains to me why Finnish text often looks like it does, with relatively many doubled letters :-) Also the timing consequences of doubled letters explains why Finnish always has this "calm flow" to it, you really take your time when a sound must be longer. Particularly find the plosives interesting, that the pause occurs *before* the sound, not after, produces a very particular rhythm.
    Now I'm super curious about Finnish hiphop :-) If the timing and length of sounds is so important to the meaning or identity of a word, do Finnish rappers have to work around this in a hiphop rhythm flow? Or is it actually something you can take advantage of, create an extra "interest" when the rhythm of the rhyme coincides with the rhythm of the word. Can you actually rhyme a short sound to its (doubled) longer sound in Finnish, or is that considered a "false rhyme"? Or what about this, given that Finnish words have an explicit intrinsic rhythm to them, is there a style of "rhyme" where the words only rhyme rhythmically, even if they have different sounds? Would that work? Many questions. It's unfortunate I can't understand Finnish :-) :-)

    • @rtyzxc
      @rtyzxc 4 года назад +5

      I'm finnish but don't listen to finnish rap but I know what it sounds like.
      In Finnish rap, double consonants and double vowels are often shortened to singles, which can make it sound a bit like japanese, and you can guess the words by the context. But yeah, if you translated it back to text literally, it would be wrong. Sometimes if a bad word would be apparent, lyrics are built to avoid that, or the rhythm is slightly sacrificed to make it correct length, you don't need a lot for double consonant.
      In normal singing, consonants are not shortened as much as in rap and it follows the rhythm of the language somewhat accurately, but short wovels get extended a lot. But that's in any language. "Perfect" singing with language rhythm following the song rhythm exactly, is not done, but technically possible, and now I'm curious in hearing some. It would probably just sound funny, because bending the vowel and consonant lengths in songs is normal.

    • @zacharyherfkens7902
      @zacharyherfkens7902 3 года назад +1

      I prefer "Physche" to "Ghoti"

    • @proot.
      @proot. 3 года назад +1

      @@zacharyherfkens7902 Yes, because unlike "physche", "ghoti" doesn't actually follow any english phonetic rules. "gh" is never pronounced [f] at at the beginning of words, see "ghost", "ghoul", "ghetto", and "ti" is never pronounced [ʃ] on its own, only in the suffix "-tion".

  • @fruitcake7789
    @fruitcake7789 5 лет назад +35

    By the way, I know Estonian and it is very close to Finnish! But in Estonian, Ü is used instead of Y, like in German. And also, Estonian has an extra letter Õ/õ.
    Finnish: Oppia
    Estonian: Õppima(da)
    In cases where Estonian uses Õ, Finnish seems to use O!

    • @SwitchyWitch_
      @SwitchyWitch_ 5 лет назад

      Estonia is bootleg Finland

    • @PaulVinonaama
      @PaulVinonaama 2 года назад +3

      Not always. For example võõras in Estonian is vieras in Finnish.

  • @themcc1879
    @themcc1879 5 лет назад +6

    Finally someone who explains the umlauted o in Finish. I have tried to figure out how to pronounce it but I haven't heard it with my ears. Thank you for the pronunciation rules. They help a lot. I speak Japanese and Spanish so much along with English that I have trouble pronouncing words from outside those three languages correctly. I want to learn more about Finish but I think it is seriously a language where you have to be in the country it is from to really get a good grasp on it.

  • @letsshall
    @letsshall 5 лет назад +7

    I love the way you teach things. You have a knack, my friend.

    • @l3p3
      @l3p3 4 года назад

      What is a knack? In German, having a _Knacks_ is something to avoid.

    • @speggeri90
      @speggeri90 4 года назад

      @@l3p3 Knack in English means you have a special disposition for a skill, such as teaching or singing.

  • @IliaArkhipov-fz3id
    @IliaArkhipov-fz3id 3 года назад +5

    You can find examples of double Vs and Js in finnish dialects :)

  • @henriquec8848
    @henriquec8848 5 лет назад +4

    Your videos are incredibly soothing and informative. Thanks for producing this kind of quality content, which is progressively scarcer on media in general. Have a great weekend!

  • @martinlelarge
    @martinlelarge 5 лет назад +2

    I think gemination can be explained by the fact that imperatives and adjectives ending in -e (like terve, in terve-(t)tuloa) used to end in a k (syö < söök) or h (terve < terveh). Which means they would've formed some kind of consonant cluster with the word after them, which resulted in present-day gemination.
    I'm not a linguist tho, so if this is nonsense, forgive me xD

    • @ExperimentIV
      @ExperimentIV 2 года назад +2

      honestly this is how it was explained to me while i was learning finnish. it was in my intermediate finnish course. it was some other consonant, let’s call it *k. so it’s compensating for *tervektuloa. the gemination occurs as the result of some kind of fossilization

  • @justanormalperson
    @justanormalperson 5 лет назад +8

    These videos are really great

  • @AliTomaev94GE
    @AliTomaev94GE 6 месяцев назад

    Wow, kiitos paljon, this is so useful, i've never paid too much attention to phonology, but hey, turns out that this is very important aspect of a language 🙌

  • @otesunki
    @otesunki 4 года назад +2

    2:25 I was surprised by the perfect pronunciation!

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  4 года назад +1

      The Russian word immediately after it didn’t go as well though :P

  • @ImperatorGrausam
    @ImperatorGrausam 4 года назад +1

    Wew, Bisqwit. You make linguistics AND retro-tech videos? Now I truly found a channel suited for me ^w^

  • @Saturos02
    @Saturos02 5 лет назад +3

    Great video, looking forward to the continuation!

  • @ArturoStojanoff
    @ArturoStojanoff 4 года назад +1

    *wowols*
    I really like this video. Thank you.

  • @choomatt
    @choomatt 5 лет назад +27

    I enjoyed this, but I dont know what to do with this knowledge

    • @Soloohara
      @Soloohara 5 лет назад

      XD

    • @Holgast
      @Holgast 5 лет назад

      now you know how to correctly pronounce 'perkele vittu saatana helveti'

    • @adabrew2310
      @adabrew2310 4 года назад +1

      @lordnordsword That is not a party trick. It is just a blatant lie.

    • @l3p3
      @l3p3 4 года назад

      Get a paper of finnish insults and read them out loud when needed.

  • @Shareenear
    @Shareenear 5 лет назад +13

    What is Sans doing here? He should rather be in introduction to Danish phonology, because if you try to say rødgrød med fløde, you're gonna have a bad time.

  • @selladore4911
    @selladore4911 3 месяца назад

    i don't even know why i'm here but I love this video because you explain things well

  • @an3ri
    @an3ri 4 года назад +3

    7:20 is something that happens after all imperative verb forms. It either doubles the following consonant, or you have a glottal stop if the following word starts with a vowel (this is just my interpretation by the way, not sure how this works exactly). For example if you say "anna _ omena" with a stop between the words it means "give me an apple", but "Anna Omena" without a stop would (probably) be interpreted as a name.

    • @visserskarel
      @visserskarel Год назад

      That's an interesting observation! While it is true that the phenomenon you described occurs after imperative verb forms, there are actually several other contexts in which it can be observed in Finnish. The doubling of the following consonant or the presence of a glottal stop before a vowel also occurs after various word forms and suffixes.
      In addition to imperative verb forms, this phonetic phenomenon can be seen after the possessive suffix of the third person (-nsa/-nsä), after first infinitives, after the allative case (-lle), after the sublative suffix (-nne), after the prolative suffix (-tse), after adverbs ending in -sti, -lti, and -ti, after most native Finnish nouns ending in -e, and a few other words and word forms.
      The reason for this doubling lies in the historical development of the Finnish language. In Proto-Finnic, the word forms that trigger this doubling actually ended in -h or -k. However, over time, the -h and -k sounds at the end of words disappeared in Standard Finnish (though the -h ending is still pronounced in the Karelian language).
      One way to analyze this phenomenon is by considering an underlying -h or -k that is always assimilated. It assimilates either to zero or to the following consonant or glottal stop, except when it is at the end of an utterance. In that case, it always assimilates to zero.
      TL;DR: this doubling of consonants or the presence of a glottal stop is not limited to imperative verb forms but also occurs after several other word forms and suffixes in Finnish. These forms used to end in -h or -k in Proto-Finnic, and the assimilation can be seen as a historical process that has shaped the phonetics of modern Standard Finnish.

    • @an3ri
      @an3ri Год назад

      @@visserskarel Great detailed comment! I would like to add an interesting observation I've made: there are some areas of Finland, such as Kotka, where people don't use the glottal stop or doubling of consonants. It sounds so odd! I wonder why this is.

  • @excitedaboutlearning1639
    @excitedaboutlearning1639 5 лет назад +3

    Great work. I'm a native speaker who's very interested in phonology. I'm very impressed with this video: You even mentioned the glottal stop. Do you have a phonetics-study background or linguistic background?
    Actually, the reason why consonants are doubled at word boundaries, is because some endings and words used to have a K or H sound at the end.
    Olla used to be oldak, nähdä used to be näkedäk.
    Vene used to be veneh
    Ostaa -> ostadak
    Mennä -> mendäk and so on.
    What later happened is that these final Ks and Hs became pronounced as glottal stops.
    Ostak tämä became ?'osta?'tämä.
    Later those glottal stops started to assimilate if the following sound was a consonant.
    ?'ostat'tämä
    I used to study these things a lot, so at one point glottal stops and duplication disappeared from my speech entirely. The key to pronouncing these correctly is pronouncing the final K or H as a GLOTTAL STOP, NOT as a duplicated consonant. Later you'll see that you'll automatically start replacing the glottal stop by a consonant sound.
    Today, I pronounce all duplications correctly and consistently. It's because of the glottal stop that I do so.
    P.S. Kiinnostaisko sua yhteistyön tekeminen? Mä niin haluisin tehä suomen kielen opetusmatskuu, mut multa puuttuu monia kykyjä kuten editoiminen, et mä saisin tällasii videoita aikaan. Me voitas yhessä suunnitella videoita ym.

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you for your kind comment! And yeah, the remnant ending (jäännöslopuke) seems to be the predominant theory for the cause of the consonant doubling. First time I hear about glottal stop substitution for it, though.
      As for me, I am just a hobbyist that has an fascination about the inner workings of languages.
      Yhteistyö olisi ehkä mahdollista! Ainoa vaan että minulla tuppaa aikataulut venymään pahasti, teen näitä projekteja silloin kun jaksan :-)

  • @Lattamonsteri
    @Lattamonsteri 5 лет назад +1

    :O I never thought of it before but G is a funny letter since it doesn't occur in Finnish alone, but it's quite commonly found next to N (ng). :P This video teaches even native Finns well, good job :D

  • @AlexVasiluta
    @AlexVasiluta 5 лет назад +2

    Some similarities/differences about the vowels to Romanian:
    Romanian also has the finnish vowels a,e,i,o,u,y,ä as a,e,i,o,u,î,ă, the only one missing being the finnish ö.
    Vowels are also pronounced individually here, even in diphthongs. Double vowels are also elongated.
    The only time when vowel sounds are changed are in "letter groups", where the group is pronounced as single/dual sounds: ce (like in *ch*eck), ci (like in *chi*ldren), ge (like in *ge*rmany), gi (like in *ja*cket), che (like in *que*stion), chi (*ki*ndergarten), ghe (*gue*ss), ghi (could not find any match)

    • @Kitulous
      @Kitulous 5 лет назад

      Those single/dual sound at the end look more like Italian rather than Finnish. And also I believe that Romanian ă sounds more as schwa, so it's like bEfriend or actOr in English. And also î is pronounced as /ɨ/, so it's more of like Russian Ы.

    • @soda_can732
      @soda_can732 2 года назад

      Ghi guild

  • @muhammadhabibjawady552
    @muhammadhabibjawady552 5 лет назад +5

    I'm impressed by your Arabic :o

    • @alborn4217
      @alborn4217 3 года назад

      I think he's Muslim.

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  3 года назад

      Under no circumstances.

  • @Pakanahymni
    @Pakanahymni 5 лет назад +3

    7:30 it's called the "jäännöslopuke" or "vestigial consonant", it comes from a historical -h or -k.

  • @wilson3844
    @wilson3844 5 лет назад

    Hyvä video! Todella mielenkiintoista.

  • @uikonimi
    @uikonimi Год назад

    The word herne used to end in a consonant a long time ago, that's why hernekeitto is pronounced with long k. Same happens with the word vene.

  • @mattiamele3015
    @mattiamele3015 3 года назад +4

    Actually, Japanese is timing-wise pretty much the way you describe Finnish. It's based on morae, not on syllable. A syllable can be variable in its duration, while morae are all pronounced with the same length. The major difference arises when you consider long vowels and double consinants. In Japanese, the extra length that turns a short vowel into a long one counts as a mora. Ditto for consonants. The nasal which is not tied to a vowel in a single syllabe (like n in "na" or m in "m") is transliterated as "n" but it's very variable phonetically and most often velar or uvular but without audible release. That one, too, counts as a separate mora. Let's take the two words obasan and obaasan, meaning "auntie" and "grandma". Considering that aa is a long vowel, one can say they are both consisting of three syllables. However, they are resectively divided into four and five moras, each supposed to have the same duration.

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  3 года назад +1

      It is quite similar indeed - which is why Japanese pronunciation is quite easy for Finnish speakers to learn - but I did list it separately with mora timing in the slide at 8:10, because it was described differently in the material I used as sources for this video. There are some differences. For example, in Finnish, “minua" (partitive form of I) and “minuna" (essive form of I) are pronounced with slightly different duration. “Valta" (governing power) is pronounced much longer than “vala” (oath). “Vatsa” (stomach) is pronounced longer than “vasa” (calf). In Japanese, syllables with a single vowel, or a consonant and vowel, are pronounced same length, and つ (tsu) does not differ in length from と (to) or う (u).

  • @learnfinnishvideos5726
    @learnfinnishvideos5726 Год назад

    This explanation is very good

  • @Halopedian
    @Halopedian 5 лет назад

    Absolutely loved it. Loving these linguistics videos

  • @Josh350
    @Josh350 5 лет назад

    Gracias por tu video Bisqwit. Es muy interesante aprender sobre tu idioma.
    Thank you for your video, Bisqwit. It's really interesting to learn about your language.

  • @kahnfatman
    @kahnfatman 3 года назад

    When Bisqwit starts out with something REALLLLY simple (like a blank editor screen lol)... be prepared for much much more complication later :D
    Seriously though, I also have a strong taste for linguistics and programming. Do you enjoy cooking too?! Vietnamese food tastes AWESOME!

  • @familiagaraguso
    @familiagaraguso 3 года назад +2

    My heart jumped out of my bloody chest when you said "hyvää iltaa!"
    ja minä aioin kysyä jos olit Suomesta

  • @tomh6339
    @tomh6339 4 года назад +2

    Your speech is so meticulously constructed that I had to go looking for errors. I find it interesting that you sometimes substitute a voiced fricative where there should be a voiceless one (saying 'dhing' instead of 'thing', i.e. substituting eth for thorn). Of course this makes perfect sense because, as you explain, there are no voiced fricatives and almost no voiced plosives in Finnish so it's not a distinction that comes naturally to you - and with the jettisoning of the written distinction between eth and thorn in English even the spelling is no help to you.

  • @Chriva
    @Chriva 5 лет назад +29

    I only have to know one phrase: "voi vittu". Swearing is universal lol

  • @jing2404
    @jing2404 3 года назад +1

    You don't wanna say "Koe" in Thailand with that accent
    😂😂😂
    TOO MUCH KOE- OH MY GOD-

  • @ImperatorGrausam
    @ImperatorGrausam 4 года назад

    Wow Bisqwit, not only do you make retrocomputing videos but also linguistics! I have an interest in both of those things.
    Anyway, Uralic languages do interest me a lot. I wonder how much Hungarian Finnish people can understand.
    Also if you make a video on Finnish morphology I'd bet it'd take more than 20 hours. Your noun cases are all over the place and I love it.

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  4 года назад +5

      In general, Finnish cannot understand a word of Hungarian. It is completely opaque. Only linguists can see some similarities.

    • @singleturbosupra7951
      @singleturbosupra7951 3 года назад +1

      There are only very very few words where you can kind of see that they most likely have come from same origins. But mostly the Hungarian vocabulary is completely different. In fact it sometimes seems it has way more in common with Turkic languages, since Hungarian has some loanwords from there historically. They also seem to have some loans from Slavic languages here and there, most likely because they are quite in between many Slavic countries. But from what I've understood the grammar rules and stuff like that are quite similar to Finnish.

    • @distar7471
      @distar7471 3 года назад

      @@Bisqwit I tell people this and they don believe me, while they also know far less about languages overall. Of course they end up shocked ŁØŁ.

  • @MidanMagistrate
    @MidanMagistrate 2 года назад

    So, I was learning russian for about 2 years, before I quit and picked up Finnish. People say its one of the hardest languages to learn, but, I'm learning it a lot better than I was learning russian

  • @unevenprankster
    @unevenprankster 5 лет назад +3

    Hmm, now I know a bit more about finnish, it may be odd compared to languages like mine (portuguese, but from brazil, which has a lot of changes to meanings of words in special) but that makes it the more interesting and quite deep in phonology.

  • @PreyMa
    @PreyMa 5 лет назад

    First time to get an intro to Finnish, the similarities to German (my native lang.) are really amazing!

  • @norbertlangner3684
    @norbertlangner3684 5 лет назад

    Great video! Very educative.
    So that explains why FIS stopped introducing ski jumper Jarkko Määttä as Jarkko Maeaettae (but Jarkko Maata, with the same rule where Piotr Żyła becomes Piotr Zyla) on the OSD. But now some sports commentators tend to pronounce Jarkko's surname with double long "a".

  • @no-ld3hz
    @no-ld3hz 3 года назад +3

    Hell yeah, now i can pronounce everything in Noita

    • @cobaltxii
      @cobaltxii 3 года назад +2

      sauvojen tuntija

    • @tlatai
      @tlatai 11 месяцев назад

      @@cobaltxii peitsivartija

  • @Zarniwooper
    @Zarniwooper 11 месяцев назад

    Marja-Liisa Haemaelaeinen. That haunts me from my childhood.

  • @paziipa
    @paziipa 5 лет назад

    Interesting serie, loving it!

  • @oferzilberman5049
    @oferzilberman5049 2 года назад

    This is a great video!

  • @quranreader7616
    @quranreader7616 3 года назад +1

    yes
    thanks

  • @okaro6595
    @okaro6595 Год назад

    "Vauva" - most pronounce it with long v. Many put long v in "lauantai" and say "lauvvantai". Long o became "uo" but that happened before the writing system was standardized so we spell it as "uo" like "Suomi" (Estonia: Soome). That means long O is rare in Finnish as is long E.

  • @geneverde
    @geneverde Год назад

    omg this video is gold

  • @monomere
    @monomere 3 года назад +3

    hmm, пять in russian is usually pronounced without the й so like “a” but a little different i guess..

  • @koveek
    @koveek 4 года назад

    I am super confused about the Finnish or the IPA for it to be exact. The Finnish is pronounced exactly like the German , as far I can hear. So the IPA should be /ɛ/ not /e/. The German ≠ the Finnish imo, but I could be wrong

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  4 года назад +1

      The perception of phonemes depends really on one’s own background. For example, I have really hard time hearing any difference between the English /i/ (feet) and /ɪ/ (bit), or between /ɑ/ (palm) and /ʌ/ (cut), or between /u/ (boot) and /ʊ/ (hook), and many other examples.
      I guess you are German? To me, the example German pronunciation
      of /e/ in Dresden at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dresden (click the speaker icon in the first paragraph) sounds exactly like the Finnish ⟨e⟩, while
      the /ɛ/ in Nuremberg at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg sounds to me like the Finnish ⟨ö⟩, that is /ø/.
      The /ɛ/ in Berlin at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlin sounds to me like something between the Finnish ⟨e⟩ and ⟨ö⟩.
      The /ɛ/ in Essen at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essen sounds to me like something between the Finnish ⟨e⟩ /e/ and ⟨ä⟩ /æ/, which is exactly where it should be according to the IPA vowel chart.
      In conclusion, in every language there are plenty of allophones to any given phoneme between different speakers or even with the same speaker, as long as there is no confusion. I spoke about allophones a bit at 6:39, although I covered only one example (allophones of /h/).
      -I couldn’t find any placename on the German map with ä in it, so I could not compare.- Allgäu according to en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allg%C3%A4u is pronounced with /ɔ/, so that is out of picture, as is the company of Löwenbräu. The product name of Jägermeister seems to be pronounced with /ɛː/ just like the German ⟨e⟩ in most cases apparently, so that is also out of picture. Dräger(werk) and Kärcher had no example pronunciation.
      Möckern and Drömling had no example pronunciation, but the
      /ø/ in Schönebeck at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sch%C3%B6nebeck sounds pretty much the same as the Finnish ⟨ö⟩.

  • @gabrielmunoz9255
    @gabrielmunoz9255 4 года назад

    i really like finnish, i hope learn it someday, excellent video by the way!!

    • @speggeri90
      @speggeri90 4 года назад

      Why not start today?

  • @calebgindelberger3046
    @calebgindelberger3046 5 лет назад

    Came for the compiler. Stayed for the accent. Learning Finnish phonology? Sure why not

  • @Vampier
    @Vampier 5 лет назад +1

    Another interesting things is that it doesn’t have female and male forms. As a Dutch speaker I probably would pronounce it a whole lot different..... I had a few Fins in stitches when I did it once ;)

  • @itsme-jj7zk
    @itsme-jj7zk 4 года назад

    Thank you 🙏 very helpful

  • @Yoshimidsu
    @Yoshimidsu 4 года назад

    Love your voice

  • @jet69399
    @jet69399 2 года назад

    the star ocean music in the background

  • @sourestcake
    @sourestcake 5 лет назад

    Gemination on morpheme boundaries happens because of lost final consonants. It can happen between any morpheme, such as in your "älä menekään" example, because the final consonant of the second-person singular imperative there is lost.
    Here's the Wiktionary page for the Proto-Finnic ancestor of "mennä": en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Finnic/mend%C3%A4k

  • @rochr4
    @rochr4 5 лет назад

    These felt like your programming tutorials!

  • @gazehound
    @gazehound 5 лет назад +3

    so that's the pattern i hear in your english, you emphasize the first syllable like finnish

  • @user-mm2tw1zr7p
    @user-mm2tw1zr7p 2 года назад

    Very well explained 👍🏻

  • @mercedesmarton3768
    @mercedesmarton3768 2 года назад +1

    As a Hungarian, it makes more sense than to an English speaker. 😊🟥⬜🟩

    • @FromG2eminor
      @FromG2eminor Год назад

      I'm American who knows and loves Hungarian. I see what you are saying. Both languages are so beautiful.

  • @Alonoda
    @Alonoda Год назад

    Thanks for such a Hebrew friendly Finnish tutorial but they're too different to make it easy for me haha

  • @dripman78
    @dripman78 5 лет назад +1

    Finnish language sounds both cute and sophisticated.

  • @MillyKKitty
    @MillyKKitty 5 лет назад +12

    Suoli mainittu, vessassa tavataan.

  • @pavelkovalyov3176
    @pavelkovalyov3176 5 лет назад +1

    Do Finnish people use more than two vowels at the same time to express some kind of thing which lasts sooo loooong? (well, not officially but just in non-formal conversation)
    And as someone already said: you pronounced "пять" as "пйять" (but we still get that ;) )
    Also, I think the difficulty of Finnish phonology can't be compared with its syntax. But that's a topic for a lot of videos. So thank you, Joel, for your comprehensive guide!

    • @potatoos
      @potatoos 5 лет назад

      Sometimes i think

    • @freezedeve3119
      @freezedeve3119 5 лет назад +2

      yes, you can use longer one, example "tosi pitkä" (really long) you can say "toooosi pitkä" which makes it sound really long ;D. In Finnish spoken language way you say it gives a lot of meaning to it, so same thing can have different meaning even opposite if you say it right way.

  • @djzx
    @djzx 5 лет назад

    My favorite chanel on youtube :-) Kör hårt ;-)

  • @4aasdaw
    @4aasdaw 5 лет назад

    I have to say I enjoy every time you touch upon linguistics, although it might be because of personal bias. I hope you continue the series and expand more than just phonetics, which, although interesting, isn't nearly as interesting as grammar. Once again, it might be due to my mother tounge being Serbian, which has most sounds present in European languages.
    In the case you never get around to tackling more complex topics, I have to ask:
    Is Finnish a subject-less language (at least optionally)? I know zero person leaves it to context, but is there an equivalent of "He called me" that ommits the subject?
    Does Finnish have a polite verb form?
    Does Finnish allow pre- (or post-) position prefixes/suffixes on verbs/words in general? I.e. do vs. redo, etc.
    In Serbian, verbs can be transitive, intransitive or reflexive (which is then split into true and false reflexiveness). A reflexive verb always has the additional reflexive pronoun 'self' and usually indicates that the action happened on its own, or that the subject is the object of the action. Does something similar exist in Finnish?

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +1

      In general you don’t leave the subject out, but there is a passive verb mode where the subject is not named. English has something similar: I was called. In the Finnish equivalent, the word for "I" is object, not subject. There is no subject. This also answers your last question.
      Finnish does not have a polite verb form, but there are circumvent ways to express things politively. There is also a difference between written (formal) Finnish and spoken Finnish. Written Finnish has more grammatical cases than spoken Finnish tends to have, and the words are a bit longer. "I am" would be always written "minä olen" (or just "olen"), but it can be spoken, depending on dialect, "mä oon", "mie olen", or some other way. The personal pronoun can however always be omitted if it is evident from the verb conjugation, as is the case here, so simply "olen" would suffice in both written and spoken language. This also touches your first question. The first and second person in both singular and plural are such that the pronoun is usually redundant. In third person (singular or plural) it is not omitted, because there are multiple options who they might be and the verb alone is not enough to name it.
      Finnish has some prefixes, but they are not the same as in English. For example, we could say "overcooked" or "precooked" using the "yli-" or "esi-" prefixes respectively, but we do not have equivalent translations for "redo" or "undo". The famous longest word in Finnish begins with the prefix "epä-", which basically means non-.

  • @fruitcake7789
    @fruitcake7789 5 лет назад +1

    In Russian vowel sounds can be preceded with "j" phonogram or not, depending on the previous consonant. The word ПЯТЬ is actually "phaet", not "pjaeti".

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +1

      The "t" in that word is palatalized, and I did my best interpretation of a /tʲ/.

    • @fruitcake7789
      @fruitcake7789 5 лет назад

      @@Bisqwit Yes, it's palatalized at the end. But another thing is that I was saying, is that some vowels have two forms in Russian.
      А, Я, Е, Ё, Э, И, Ы, О, У, Ю:
      А: A
      Я: ha (short "ja"), ja
      Е: e, je
      Ё: ho (short "jo"), jo
      Э: eh
      И: i
      Ы: y
      О: o
      У: u
      Ю: hju (short "ju"), ju
      I hope I got it right. Something like that. I'm a native speaker of Russian but I may have forgotten some of the details.
      As an example:
      the word ЯБЛОКО = JABLOKO (uses "ja")
      ПЯТЬ = PhAT' (uses short "ja")

  • @leopartanen9431
    @leopartanen9431 5 лет назад +1

    5:13 I think the letter D is just implemented by Agricola. Not original Finnish sound, but nowadays pretty easy for the Finns to pronounce like the letter F.
    D is sometimes pronounced as R or T, or not at all, it depends where are you from. I usually drop it out because it feels more natural than literary Finnish no one really speaks.

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад

      So how do you pronounce “kädet” for example? Or “kadulla”?

    • @leopartanen9431
      @leopartanen9431 5 лет назад

      @@Bisqwit I pronounce kädet as kädet, but many people say it as "käet". I think that without teaching the D sound in schools, we could say those words as "käthet" and "kathulla" or some other variations of those words.
      If you understand Finnish you can check the letter D in Finnish language from wikipedia:
      fi.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/D

    • @singleturbosupra7951
      @singleturbosupra7951 3 года назад +1

      @@leopartanen9431 Reminded me that some people actually also say "käjet". But I don't believe "käjet" has evolved straight from "kädet", instead I think it may have evolved from the "käet" you mentioned

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 2 года назад +1

      The original sound was th in some Western dialects. It was written with Ð or D. Later the "th" spelling disappeared and the the learned started to pronounce it as D. There it spread to the official language. It became adopted in normal speech on some areas but on traditional dialects there is no D.

  • @golsam4592
    @golsam4592 5 лет назад

    Wow!!!! I'm loving it

  • @louisparry-mills9132
    @louisparry-mills9132 5 лет назад +1

    How many languages do you speak? It seems like you hint at speaking Hebrew? Did you learn that for your own religious purposes or just curiousity about Judeo-Christian theology?
    Also I'm really glad I came across your channel these videos are v interesting to me. I'll probably never learn Finnish but it's a fascinating language and I think the accent in English is charming

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +3

      I know Finnish and English really well, and some bits of Japanese, Swedish, Hebrew, and Estonian, in descending order of skill. I teach Israeli folk dance and sometimes Torah too, so I try to learn enough to know what I am talking about. And sometimes things just stick, so I have memorized some songs, prayers and even every-day phrases in Hebrew. But I have never actually studied the language.

  • @Saturos02
    @Saturos02 5 лет назад +8

    Kuusi palaa :D

    • @walavouchey
      @walavouchey 5 лет назад +1

      crud, the ambiguity is making me crazy >.

    • @minecraftermad
      @minecraftermad 5 лет назад +4

      @@walavouchey oh he just said one of the following:
      the six is on fire,
      six of them are on fire,
      six returns,
      six of them return,
      six pieces,
      of a spruce piece,
      spruce is on fire,
      spruce returns,
      a piece of your moon,
      your moon returns or
      your moon is on fire

  • @jacksonamaral329
    @jacksonamaral329 2 года назад

    i enjoyed it.

  • @lelandclayton5462
    @lelandclayton5462 5 лет назад +1

    With English I before E except after C. Yet there are 6,140 English words that do not follow that rule lol.

  • @proot.
    @proot. Год назад

    Pretty neat that both American English and Finnish have /ɑ/ and /æ/ phonemes

  • @okaro6595
    @okaro6595 Год назад

    7:45 I had to listen three times to hear the difference.

  • @stardusssr
    @stardusssr 3 года назад

    that was really good

  • @dudeawsomeness1
    @dudeawsomeness1 5 лет назад +1

    I want to learn all these languages (Hebrew, french) and welsh

  • @treyquattro
    @treyquattro 3 года назад +2

    thanks! Now I can move to Finland and join Bisqwit, Laurie and Anni of Hydraulic Press Channel ("heedroolic prrress chnnl") and Kimi Raikonnen (no umlauts on this keyboard, sorry)

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  3 года назад +1

      His name is Lauri! But yeah, welcome :-)

  • @Lucifersphoton
    @Lucifersphoton 2 года назад

    I am working on learning. العربية, Ελληνικά, Suomi, Deutsch, Русский, Italiano, and a few more European languages.

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  2 года назад

      That is quite an undertaking!

    • @Lucifersphoton
      @Lucifersphoton 2 года назад

      @@Bisqwit Tack så mycket!!

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  2 года назад

      @@Lucifersphoton Lycka till med din studier.

  • @franklinm9775
    @franklinm9775 5 лет назад

    thanks for this video can you post more videos about finnish language thank you

  • @Kukkakukko
    @Kukkakukko 5 лет назад +1

    Italians also speak finnish in a very recognizable way, dunno why but it must have something to do with italy :D

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +2

      Do they? I only know of one Italian who speaks Finnish. That sample set is too small to make conclusions.

  • @mattiamele3015
    @mattiamele3015 3 года назад

    I noticed something interesting. When you pronounce "lahja" the sound you use for h is actually a [ħ], not a [x]. It's the same as the Arabic ح.

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  3 года назад

      I may have difficulty telling those two phonemes apart…

  • @ThIrDWatCher
    @ThIrDWatCher 5 лет назад

    It's 2 am and here we go again

  • @xmvziron
    @xmvziron 4 года назад

    4:59 Those sound more like ejective stops.

  • @thesuomi8550
    @thesuomi8550 5 лет назад +1

    There actually are words with long v and long j (vauva and kaija) even though they're written with only one v or j

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад

      Maybe in some dialects. I don’t pronounce them with a long v or a long j.

    • @thesuomi8550
      @thesuomi8550 5 лет назад +1

      @@Bisqwit I highly doubt that, never heard anyone not say those with a long v or j

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад

      To be fair, those are not words I say often. But I stand by what I wrote above.

    • @thesuomi8550
      @thesuomi8550 5 лет назад +1

      @@Bisqwit alright then, official pronunciation for those is with a long consonant though so if you actually pronounce them with a short one then that's pretty interesting. Maybe one way to try it is if you try to pronounce vauva and then vauvva with a long v and see if there's a big difference

    • @singleturbosupra7951
      @singleturbosupra7951 3 года назад +1

      Itse en suoraan sanottuna edes tiedä tai osaa kuvitella miltä kuulostaisi sanoa Kaija "yhdellä" j:llä :D
      Olisiko se vähän niinku sanois "Kai" ja "Ja" niinku ne olis eri sanoja?

  • @michamarzec9786
    @michamarzec9786 4 года назад +2

    Ok so now I can sing "Ievan Polkka"

  • @lerias8027
    @lerias8027 5 лет назад

    How smart are you? Talented in many ways! Nice!

  • @quaternaryyy
    @quaternaryyy 5 лет назад +9

    sans undertale

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +5

      Yup that’s him.

  • @ScaryHutmanPictures
    @ScaryHutmanPictures 5 лет назад +2

    But what do you do when there is no ÖÄÜ? Simply write OAU instead?

    • @comptegoogle4313
      @comptegoogle4313 5 лет назад +1

      Scary_Hutman std::dbg( &n );

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +2

      Finnish does not use Ü. If you don’t have Ä and Ö, you write A and O instead. Even though it sometimes conveys a different word (for example, söin = I ate, soin = I emit musical sounds; näin = I saw, nain = I marry/make love), usually you can guess from context what the writer meant.

  • @gaving.griffon2703
    @gaving.griffon2703 4 года назад

    So, when will we be getting lessons on finnish grammar?

  • @Lattamonsteri
    @Lattamonsteri 5 лет назад

    Are linja-auto and iki-ihana part of phonetics studies or do they fall more into grammar studies? :P Then there's also those pesky words like i'issä or something ("in ages") and raa'an ("of a raw") :P

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  5 лет назад +1

      Are you talking about the dash in the middle? That would be grammar. Same with the concept of syllables. Are you talking about the glottal stop in the middle, if a speaker chooses to do that? That would be phonetics.

    • @Lattamonsteri
      @Lattamonsteri 5 лет назад

      @@Bisqwit Yes those ones :D I was just wondering if they both have an effect on the phonetics since in both occasions you pause for a millisecond :D

  • @frenlyfire
    @frenlyfire 5 лет назад

    Great!!!!!!!!!

  • @kirilvelinov7774
    @kirilvelinov7774 Год назад

    Jhope's phonetic alphabet is based on Estonian!
    Names:A,Be,Ce,De,Dse,E,Ef,Ge,Ha,I,Je,Ka,El,Em,En,Eng,O,Pe,Es,Te,U,Ve
    IPA:a b ts d dz e f g x i j k l m n ñ o p s t u w
    Letters in loanwords:
    Q(kiu,Cue)
    R(lo,Rho)
    W(vin,Wynn)
    X(iks,Icks)
    Y(joh,Yogh) iglek more commonly used
    Z(set,Zed)

    • @Bisqwit
      @Bisqwit  Год назад

      What’s a Jhope? I asked this earlier, and got no answer.