By digging around in Wiktionary for the etymologies for all of them, I found the meanings of all the month words are quite interesting. And a fun fact: in Chinese, we also use the same character of moon for month-月. tammi:(dialectal, archaic) heart, core, axis
I love this, thank you so much for giving us this knowledge. How beautiful that our Finnish ancestors left us the survival instructions for mankind, written in our calendars.
Kitos! Olen Bangladeshista. This is very helpful for me as i'm the beginner. Now I'm trying to say some words & sentences as well with my partner. This seems very interesting to me. Anyways, thanks Anna . wonderful session , I must say♥️
Kiitos paljon videostasi, Anna! Se oli mahtava. Sinulla on tosi hyvä "opetusmuoto"! It's nice the days are so simple - makes up in part for the tricky months!
Kiitos, Anna! Several of these words seem to break vowel-harmony, especially the “kuu”s mismatching what comes before it. For example, it would seem like “heinäkuu” would need to be either “heinäkyy” or ”heinakuu” (?). I guess that’s because they’re technically compound words, the “kuu” being “moon,” as you pointed out.
It is a compound word so the vowel harmony does not apply. Kuu means moon. Kyy would be a viper. One special word is tällainen (like this). It seems to break the vowel harmony but it actually comes from "tämän lainen". Many say it as "tälläinen" so they put the vowel harmony where it does not officially belong. In Finnish there is a comitative case which means with something. It is always in plural like "koirineen" even if there is just one dog. It is seldom used, instead people use postposition "kanssa". Officially one would say "koiransa kanssa" but in spoken language one says "koiran kaa". But remember spoken language does not have word breaks. Is that a postposition or a new case: "koirankaa"? Well if he comes with his mother it is "äidin kaa" but some actually say "äidinkää". That in no way can be short of "äidin kanssa" . It is actually a new comitative case. Now Estonian has also comitative and what is the ending there? Well it is "ga". Estonian is in many ways a more developed language. Many things that are unofficial in Finnish are official in Estonian.
@@okaro6595, good clarification! Thanks. I was suspecting that was the reason, but wasn’t sure. I guess vowel harmony is preserved between roots and endings (e.g., oletteko vs. tiedättekö), but not across compound nouns (etc.).
Hei anna its me again my finnish is perfect my finnish friends grandpa and father are shocked I was on FaceTime speaking finnish and they were shocked to see an American on the other end apparently my friends father likes me and respects me for my finnish skills thank you so much for these lessons
Wait, it all makes sense now, december is joulukuu, and in Christmas there's joulutorttus... wow, my mind just opened immensely for no reason, but I guess that's one way to remember December now
Moi! ope Anna .. i am just started studying Finnish language and it is awesome to be a part of your video's 😇...can you make a video on how to put dates on the month's (example birthdays) ..kiitos😊
Do you have a video explaining how to say the days (number) for example I thought you could say Maanantai kaksikymmentä kaksi. I was told its kahdeskymmenestoinen 😅
Hei. minä on soumi. minä puuhuu soumi peinei sinä on hyvä minä soumi (Hi. i am finnish- i talk finnish small you are good i finnish) (im still not very good at finnish but im still kinda good)
By digging around in Wiktionary for the etymologies for all of them, I found the meanings of all the month words are quite interesting. And a fun fact: in Chinese, we also use the same character of moon for month-月.
tammi:(dialectal, archaic) heart, core, axis
This is interesting, thanks for sharing!
I love this, thank you so much for giving us this knowledge. How beautiful that our Finnish ancestors left us the survival instructions for mankind, written in our calendars.
Good. Doing the teacher's job 😅
Thank you - that will help me to remember the months! I see you got a kiss from the teacher, hmmm!!!
你也是中国人吗?感谢科普!😭🥰
Anna your teaching style is perfect. Thank u . From Nepal
Thanks, so glad you like it!
Thank you for the lovely videos. I especially appreciate that you teach us about the suffixes abit every lesson so that it's not overwhelming
I'm glad you find it useful, thanks for watching! :-)
Your teaching style is perfect, thanks alot
Thank you so much!
great. thanks so much by videos. it helps me much. thanks again.😘😘
Kitos! Olen Bangladeshista.
This is very helpful for me as i'm the beginner. Now I'm trying to say some words & sentences as well with my partner. This seems very interesting to me. Anyways, thanks Anna . wonderful session , I must say♥️
Where do you live? Finland or Bangladesh?
Kiitos paljon from Brazil.
kiitos paljon anna :)). I have a very clear vision that I will relocate to Finland.
You are important teacher and you are smart 🤓 so thank you for helping 😊 i like your channel 💯
I really like your teaching style.Easy to remember and more organize.
its really helping kiitos paljon anna😊💕💕for sharing from UAE
i really really enjoyed this videos of yours it really helped me with my study ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks Anna (from poland)
Kiitos paljon videostasi, Anna! Se oli mahtava. Sinulla on tosi hyvä "opetusmuoto"!
It's nice the days are so simple - makes up in part for the tricky months!
kiitos paljon, you are doing a great job, started to watch your videos today and I really love them
Glad to hear you enjoy them! Thanks for watching! :-)
Hi Anna. Im a new subscriber. Excited to learn Finnish.😊
I really love your way of teaching. Am learning a lot . Thanks Anna
Kiitos paljon Anna 😊
Kiitos, Anna!
Several of these words seem to break vowel-harmony, especially the “kuu”s mismatching what comes before it. For example, it would seem like “heinäkuu” would need to be either “heinäkyy” or ”heinakuu” (?). I guess that’s because they’re technically compound words, the “kuu” being “moon,” as you pointed out.
It is a compound word so the vowel harmony does not apply. Kuu means moon. Kyy would be a viper. One special word is tällainen (like this). It seems to break the vowel harmony but it actually comes from "tämän lainen". Many say it as "tälläinen" so they put the vowel harmony where it does not officially belong.
In Finnish there is a comitative case which means with something. It is always in plural like "koirineen" even if there is just one dog. It is seldom used, instead people use postposition "kanssa". Officially one would say "koiransa kanssa" but in spoken language one says "koiran kaa". But remember spoken language does not have word breaks. Is that a postposition or a new case: "koirankaa"? Well if he comes with his mother it is "äidin kaa" but some actually say "äidinkää". That in no way can be short of "äidin kanssa" . It is actually a new comitative case. Now Estonian has also comitative and what is the ending there? Well it is "ga". Estonian is in many ways a more developed language. Many things that are unofficial in Finnish are official in Estonian.
@@okaro6595, good clarification! Thanks. I was suspecting that was the reason, but wasn’t sure.
I guess vowel harmony is preserved between roots and endings (e.g., oletteko vs. tiedättekö), but not across compound nouns (etc.).
Kiitos from Greece ❤️
Hei anna its me again my finnish is perfect my finnish friends grandpa and father are shocked I was on FaceTime speaking finnish and they were shocked to see an American on the other end apparently my friends father likes me and respects me for my finnish skills thank you so much for these lessons
Many thanks. God bless you
Thank u so much from Pakistan
Great lessons! Congratulations, please keep on.
Thank you!
Finally I learnt it,
Usually we practicing it in WhatsApp group Unluckily we don't hav3 much Finnish there your vidoe is so much helpful..
So happy to hear this!
@@FinnishWithAnna kittos Anna 😁
Great Done!💕
so great you are doing it very well dont stop it well done kiitos paljon!!!
Thanks so much! Will definitely keep making videos. :-)
@@FinnishWithAnna yeah!!! thanks
Wait, it all makes sense now, december is joulukuu, and in Christmas there's joulutorttus... wow, my mind just opened immensely for no reason, but I guess that's one way to remember December now
Kiitos 🌺🌷🌸
Thanks dear Anna
Kiitos Anna
Moi! ope Anna .. i am just started studying Finnish language and it is awesome to be a part of your video's 😇...can you make a video on how to put dates on the month's (example birthdays) ..kiitos😊
Kiitos 🏵️😊
Kittos, opettaja! 🦋😁
Kittos ,you are good in teatch Saïd from morroco
Terve Anna, I'm your new student. Olen Bangladeshista.
kittos Anna from Ethiopia
Do you have a video explaining how to say the days (number) for example I thought you could say Maanantai kaksikymmentä kaksi. I was told its kahdeskymmenestoinen 😅
Yes I do, check out lessons 49 and 50! :-)
Thank Opettaja.
'torstai' sounds like 'Thursday' said with an Australian accent
Thanks ana 😍😍
Good job Anna !
Thanks so much for your support!
@@FinnishWithAnna You are most welcome :)
Kiitos paljon.
Kiitos 😊
tanx, it was great 👍
Hello, what do you mean by capitalized? Thank you!
I mean written with a capital letter. :-)
@@FinnishWithAnna Thank you!
❤❤❤
What’s the meaning is heippa
heippa means bay bay the same moi-moi
Kiitos
Super learn new language here
you're awesome!
0:17 Monday
Thanks
happy independence day!! its my birthday too hehe
Thanks! I just uploaded a new video about Finnish holidays. :-) Happy birthday, hope you have a good one!
@@FinnishWithAnna kiitos i am going now to watch your new video yeah
thank you
Studying Finnish 😭😭😁😁😁
"Keskiviikko" means "middle week" in literal sense.
Good video.
1.
Weekdays & months = Viikonpäivat & kuukaudet.
Monday - maanantai
Tuesday - tiistai
Wednesday - keskiviikko
Thursday - torstai
Friday - perjantal
Saturday - lauantai
Sunday - sunnuntai
2.
January - tammikuu
February - helmikuu
March - maaliskuu
April - huhtikuu
May - toukokuu
June - kesäkuu
July - heinäkuu
August - elokuu
September - syyskuu
October - lokakuu
November - marraskuu
December - Joulukuu
Nice😮
Theke you from bangladesh
Hei. minä on soumi. minä puuhuu soumi peinei sinä on hyvä minä soumi (Hi. i am finnish- i talk finnish small you are good i finnish) (im still not very good at finnish but im still kinda good)
Keep practising! :-)
Anna do you have private address? Like email, discord, phone number. Thanks (kittos)
What the mean of not capitalized ??
They don't start with capital letters, like instead of Tiistai it's tiistai
Kiitos
❤❤❤
Kiitos
Kiitos