My Favorite Funny FINNISH Phrases // my last FINNISH FRIDAY

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • #finland #finnishphrases #finnishfriday
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Комментарии • 330

  • @ilesalmo7724
    @ilesalmo7724 3 года назад +39

    My favorite is "Juosten kustu": eng. "Pissing while running", which means to do something badly and leaving a mess, because you are in a hurry.

  • @JakeKilka
    @JakeKilka 3 года назад +24

    Esteri was a water pump machine used in fire engines long time ago, and it was located in rear area of the vehicle. Hence it rains like from Esteri's behind. There are few other explanations, but this one is the most likely one.

    • @ilesalmo7724
      @ilesalmo7724 3 года назад +5

      Other possible explanation was that Ester was a steam-boat working in Saimaa-lake with one of those big wheel paddles you see in wild-west Mississippi film

  • @oh2mp
    @oh2mp 3 года назад +19

    "To take one behind the sauna" is because long time ago cattle and other household animals were usually butchered behind the sauna. Another one is "saunan takana on tilaa" (there's space available behind the sauna) which means that someone will be taken behind the sauna if...

    • @ilesalmo7724
      @ilesalmo7724 3 года назад +1

      Since sauna has a lot of clean water and ways to clean yourself, it was an obvious choice to get stains off so close to it was the best place

    • @mikitz
      @mikitz 3 года назад

      @@ilesalmo7724 Firewood was also usually stored behind the sauna and you would basically end up in a battle royale and subsequently kill or get killed with a log or an axe when diplomacy failed. Sadly this tradition has fallen out of favor, among many others.

  • @leopartanen9431
    @leopartanen9431 3 года назад +23

    Sopii kuin nyrkki silmään.
    "Fits like a fist in the eye."
    Minkä nuorena varastaa, sen vanhana omistaa.
    "What is stolen at a young age, is owned at the old age."

  • @helenakoivisto4459
    @helenakoivisto4459 3 года назад +36

    Ihana sarja!! Älä pliis lopeta tättä ihanaa Finnish Friday- sarjaa ! Tämä on upea!

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +3

      😘❤️

    • @artokautiainen
      @artokautiainen 3 года назад

      Lumilapio!
      How went your Turku time? Did you like the oldest city of Finland? How you felt our services of vacation time vs. Texas?

  • @farouq7107
    @farouq7107 3 года назад +39

    Last Finnish Friday?! The series just started 😢😢

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +10

      It’s my 10th Finnish Friday week! I will still post finnish content though ☺️

    • @pionjar666
      @pionjar666 3 года назад +4

      @@WildwoodVagabond Yeah. Kutakin aikansa. I don't how to say it in english. Time to "move on". Something like that but not quite.

    • @martinklopnof5284
      @martinklopnof5284 3 года назад +2

      Mutta monta ensimäistä tulee jälkimäiseksi, ja jälkimäistä ensimäiseksi. Mar 10:31

    • @artoeloranta2810
      @artoeloranta2810 3 года назад +2

      @@martinklopnof5284: Sydämeen ei mahdu kahta ämmää kun taas sekä ensimmäisiin että jälkimmäisiin niitä kuuluu aina kaksi. Siis ämmiä.

    • @martinklopnof5284
      @martinklopnof5284 3 года назад

      @@artoeloranta2810
      Ei kenkään voi palvella kahta herraa; sillä taikka hän tätä vihaa ja toista rakastaa, taikka hän tähän suostuu ja toisen ylönkatsoo. Ette voi palvella Jumalaa ja mammonaa. Mat 6:24

  • @yorkaturr
    @yorkaturr 3 года назад +23

    "Heittää lusikka nurkkaan" is a pretty old one for sure. In German there's a similar saying "den Löffel abgeben", which means giving away your spoon. In medieval times people ate with their personal spoons, which were often hung on a rack in your house or kept in your pocket at all times.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +4

      That’s so interesting 😃

    • @Aurinkohirvi
      @Aurinkohirvi 3 года назад +6

      More commonly I hear: "to throw crank" (heittää veivi).
      "He threw his crank" (hän heitti veivinsä)." Means he died. And a variation of it, "to throw fishing reel" (heitti virvelinsä).
      And corresponding the "kick bucket" we have "kicked a miss" (potkaista tyhjää).

    • @juhalehtinen4068
      @juhalehtinen4068 3 года назад +1

      @@Aurinkohirvi Enpä ole tuommoista sanontaa ikinä kuullutkaan, ”heittää veivinsä” kylläkin🤔

    • @Aurinkohirvi
      @Aurinkohirvi 3 года назад +3

      @@juhalehtinen4068 Aaah, joo. Ai heittää "virveliä" et, mutta veivin kyllä. Just, just. Veivihän se yleensä onkin, toi virveli on muunnos siitä (virvelissäkin on veivi). Muokkasin molemmat siihen kommenttiin.

    • @anzornos
      @anzornos 3 года назад +1

      Ok. Now that phrase makes a lot more sense. Thanks.

  • @MustaLaatta
    @MustaLaatta 3 года назад +16

    Btw Esteri is atleast one over 50 yrs old firewaterpump manufatrurer here in Finland..

    • @juhalehtinen4068
      @juhalehtinen4068 3 года назад +5

      At least over 100 years old i would say...

    • @jmarkula
      @jmarkula 3 года назад

      @@juhalehtinen4068 en muuten tienny tuotakaan. ihmettelin nuorena kössinä, miksi Esterin perse? :-P En myöskään ole esteriä käyttänyt, joten..se siitä

    • @sepposavinainen2660
      @sepposavinainen2660 3 года назад

      Wow, i didn't know that. Now i know, thanks!

  • @harrigranqvist7871
    @harrigranqvist7871 3 года назад +10

    I feel you! I shared some time ago some Finnish phrases with my US colleague and she was laughing her ass off. But, you missed my favorite. It is "goes around like a lingonberry in a pussy" or "pyörii kuin puolukka pillussa". It means freely translated like if someone does not know what to do and just goofs around. And another one "own cow in a ditch" or "oma lehmä ojassa". It means that you have your own personal benefit involved to promote some topic.

  • @lintu25
    @lintu25 3 года назад +2

    Loved thise translations. Much of love to you !

  • @PekkaSiltala
    @PekkaSiltala 3 года назад +7

    Moni kakku päältä kaunis, vaan on silkkoa sisältä. That comes from Kalevala. Kullervo's foster mother had baked a bread for Kullervo to eat while hearding cattle in forest. But she baked a stone inside and Kullervo broke his knife cutting the bread.

  • @janisinisalo
    @janisinisalo 3 года назад +16

    The Esterin perse one is most likely because there is a firepump(high capacity waterpump) manufacturer named Esteri in Finland....Makes more sense like that.

    • @keyalpha1
      @keyalpha1 3 года назад

      Tuota en tiennykkää. Oonki vähän ihmetelly...

    • @SK-nw4ig
      @SK-nw4ig 3 года назад

      This is the reason.

    • @mikorossi1959
      @mikorossi1959 3 года назад

      Edesmennyt Äitini muutti just ton takia nimensä Esteristä Etti. Se on muuten raamatusta tuo Esteri. Eli hirvee ja samalla kaunis nimi.

  • @Songfugel
    @Songfugel 3 года назад +5

    Thanks for the video, little sad to hear you are stopping this series, loved it from the start :)
    Everything in Finland these days are online, even all the grocery shops have online shops now and home delivery. The price comparison would be rather easy to do even from the US
    Lumilapio! :D

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +2

      Nice to hear! Thank you ❤️ I will definitely post more finnish content. Just maybe other things too. Take care!

  • @VesperHelsing
    @VesperHelsing 3 года назад +11

    My favourite is a gloomy one: "Kärsi, kärsi - Kirkkaimman kruunun saat." Just suffer and suffer. You'll get the shiniest crown.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +2

      Haha 😂 that is so finnish

    • @seetaami5810
      @seetaami5810 3 года назад +1

      @@WildwoodVagabond Note: The usage of this adage is _exclusively sarcastic_ , a mockery of the victimhood mentality.
      (Has also been used to make a point regarding certain unscientific postmodernist political careers in academia based on professionalized victimhood and obscure but aggressive language-games.)

  • @satukarimaki4929
    @satukarimaki4929 3 года назад +1

    My favourite saying is "pyörii kuin puolukka pillussa" literally "rolls around like a lingonberry in p**sy" Used when someone is running around anxious unable to stay still.

  • @XeonX__ASMR__METAL-experiments
    @XeonX__ASMR__METAL-experiments Год назад +2

    I love Finland (actually i love everything and everyone :)
    But I hope to move to the country in near future. 🎉

  • @helenakoivisto4459
    @helenakoivisto4459 3 года назад +2

    Kiitos!! Ihana video. Olet niin ihana ja kiitos videoistasi!!

  • @jukkasillanpaa8459
    @jukkasillanpaa8459 3 года назад +9

    "Moni kakku päältä kaunis, vaan on silkkoa sisältä,"

  • @Robustacap
    @Robustacap 3 года назад +6

    I am a Finn and my own favorite saying, as it is so Finnish must be "Metsä vastaa niinkuin sille huutaa" translates directly "The Forest Answers as/like you yell at it". Note AT meaning to something, not IN something. Means basically you reap what you sow., you made your bed, now sleep in it.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +3

      I really like that!! Thanks for sharing

    • @jukkakopol7355
      @jukkakopol7355 3 года назад +1

      President elect also like that phrase. How he had herd it idon't know. But he have visit here couple of times.

    • @Robustacap
      @Robustacap 3 года назад +1

      @@WildwoodVagabond No prob, also "persaukinen" could be translated by your knowledge of Ismo Leikola, "Broke ass" ;-) in short we just say PA and all know what it means.. We have an ackronym for broke ass :-D

  • @68JayDog
    @68JayDog 3 года назад +1

    As a Finn,i can say.You nailed it!Very amusing video.Kiitos! : )

  • @honkeydolemite9025
    @honkeydolemite9025 3 года назад +2

    If you throw your spoon in to the corner it means you are done with eating for good. This come from agrarian times when food was served from single serving dish only thing you had was spoon that was your personal utensil.

    • @nathan2813
      @nathan2813 3 года назад

      I am SO respecting the idea of carrying your own silverware! That way you AND your hosts don't have to waste time, water, and emotional energy washing it after just one use!
      People could do that with BOWLS/CUPS, too! I have a collapsible silicone-rubber camping bowl/cup I bought at Walmart I use all the time (and never wash) - works great!

  • @sepposavinainen2660
    @sepposavinainen2660 3 года назад

    Loved when you say you are sorry for Ester :D

  • @honkeydolemite9025
    @honkeydolemite9025 3 года назад +7

    Persaukinen is new form of saying that ones does not have anyting exept wind swept arse. It neans you are broke and you have only your personal abilities and nothing else.

    • @Pentti_Hilkuri
      @Pentti_Hilkuri 3 года назад +1

      When someone is left with nothing, all you have is a "tuulen huuhtoma perse" = "wind swept bare arse".

    • @Sevensixtytwo
      @Sevensixtytwo 3 года назад

      I think that may come from idea that is only merchandise if you have nothing else.

  • @jammu157
    @jammu157 3 года назад

    I’ve Brenberg enjoying your videos so much. What ever context you have , keep posting!

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      Thank you for your support ❤️🥰✌🏼

    • @jammu157
      @jammu157 3 года назад

      @@WildwoodVagabond I’ve been enjoying...
      Autocorrect. Sorry.

  • @PetriApell
    @PetriApell 3 года назад +1

    Aivan mahtava video taas kiitos

  • @johanneshyvarinen
    @johanneshyvarinen 3 года назад +4

    Suo siellä, vetelä täällä = Swamp in there, squishy in here...Close to English version of: "Damn if you do, damn if you dont" :D

  • @paulpasanen1498
    @paulpasanen1498 3 года назад +1

    I just started watching... I will miss the Finnish Fridays... dogs are cute... I have several also, just like yours.

  • @SUBTT67
    @SUBTT67 3 года назад +6

    That went well. One good band is Poets of the fall, if you like more melodic music.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +1

      Oh yeah I’m gonna check them out! I’ve gotten several requests for that band

  • @bettyhappschatt3467
    @bettyhappschatt3467 3 года назад

    Thank you for the videos about Finland! They were so much fun to watch. I understand it was perhaps a little boring or not so much fun anymore to go on talking about Finland all the time. I still hope you will make a new Finnish Friday sometimes.
    These are some of my Finnish phrases:
    I am having a Bad Hair Day = Mun tukka on kuin petolinnun perse = My hair looks like a raptor's arse.
    We really should leave now = Let's go, luteet, punkka palaa. = Let's go, bedbugs, the bed is on fire! (A nice English-Finnish hybrid)
    That was fast! (a car, an athlete etc) = Lähti kuin pupu pöpeliköstä = Took off like a bunny from a brushwood.
    We are not making any sounds = Ollaan hiljaa kuin kusi sukassa = We are as quiet as the pee in a sock.
    We love Finland = Oma maa mansikka, muu maa mustikka. = Our homeland is (like a) strawberry, any other country is (like a) blueberry.
    I think I have got a lot of life experience = Olen kiertänyt muutakin kuin tahkoa = The grindstone is not the only thing I have been reeling.
    You might get hurt if you are too ambitious = Ken kuuseen kurkottaa, se katajaan kapsahtaa = Who reaches up to a fir shall land flat on his / her face in a juniper.
    A freezing cold rainstorm = Sataa äkäisiä ämmiä äkeet selässä = It is raining angry matrons with harrows on their backs.

  • @sket179
    @sket179 3 года назад +2

    Esther or Eostre is an ancient goddess of Spring. So, it rains a lot during the spring. That's where the saying comes from. You also nailed the book by it's cover metaphor. Cake is pretty from the outside, but sometimes they are plain or dry or whatever from the inside. Kind of why I dislike cupcakes, since they are focused solely on the visuals, and the toppings and base usually taste like nothing or butter.

    • @nathan2813
      @nathan2813 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, I'm not a big fan of cupcakes either, for the same reasons. Also, I don't like having to peel the paper off.
      Similarly, I prefer ice cream in a bowl over cones, and boneless chicken.

  • @simmysims9209
    @simmysims9209 3 года назад +4

    Sokerina pohjalla is normally used when something is wrong and there is more on the bottom. It can be worse or something good. It depends how sarcastic the sayer is 😛

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      Haha nice 😄

    • @zabnat
      @zabnat 3 года назад

      In my experience this is the only context it is used. I guess you could think of it like it was the sugar that burned to the bottom of the pan. ;)

  • @angelinashiloh
    @angelinashiloh 3 года назад

    I saw tampere downtown on RUclips. It looks very beautiful. Very clean

  • @JainMonroe
    @JainMonroe 3 года назад

    Ilma kuin morsian
    weather like a bride then the sun shines and the weather is absolutely awesome

  • @jounipenttila9908
    @jounipenttila9908 3 года назад +1

    Good video! Thank you!

  • @tonituomanen3113
    @tonituomanen3113 3 года назад

    You said persaukinen absolutely correct. :) And those other phrases too.

  • @MustaLaatta
    @MustaLaatta 3 года назад +3

    "ilo pintaan vaik syvän (heart) märkänis (would rot)!" Karelian proverb, that means:"Look joyfull even if you feel miserable..."

  • @Erkilmarl
    @Erkilmarl 3 года назад +3

    We even have a noun "kuulumiset", which according to my dictionary means '(latest) news' (of mostly private nature). So "Mitä kuuluu?" = "Kerro kuulumiset!" = "Tell me the latest news!" Now I really understand why I feel uncomfortable when I'm supposed to give a short answer to that question.

    • @elderscrollsswimmer4833
      @elderscrollsswimmer4833 3 года назад

      Well if nothing new happened since you last met your answer will be short. If there is, well, go ahead and talk about that. Like.. did someone you know have a baby since you last met the person you're talking to?

  • @annelipohjonen6792
    @annelipohjonen6792 3 года назад

    Please dont limit the content. just go towards what you want. this was really funny to see our saying this way. Lumilapio!

  • @seetaami5810
    @seetaami5810 3 года назад

    _Itku pitkästä ilosta; pieru kauan naurannasta._
    Tears shall stem from joy long-lasting; flatulence from too much laughing.

  • @Sevensixtytwo
    @Sevensixtytwo 3 года назад

    Putosi kuin koppelo oksalta. Dropped like a wood grouse from branch. This originates from hunting. If one hits a perfect shot animal dies immediately and drops like a rag. Sometimes this is said if someone falls accidentaly or was so drunk that cannot handle him/herself.

  • @bazodee2
    @bazodee2 3 года назад +7

    My favorite:
    Jollakin ei ole kaikki muumit laaksossa = somebody doesnt have all the moomins in the valley = somebody is crazy
    If you havent watched moomins cartoons it wont open to you.

    • @keyalpha1
      @keyalpha1 3 года назад +2

      Sama kuin : Ei ole kaikki lepakot tapulissa.

    • @bazodee2
      @bazodee2 3 года назад +2

      Kaikki inkkarit kanootissa.

    • @mikkoammer7810
      @mikkoammer7810 3 года назад +2

      Tai... Ei nouse hissi ylimpään kerrokseen.
      Tuuli puhaltaa tunnelissa / tapulissa.
      Ei käy kaikilla sylintereillä.
      Näitä on monia.
      Tarkoittaen jotakuinkin samaa. Kun henkilö on tyhmä tai ei vain ymmärrä asioita.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      I like that one!

    • @jukkakorhonen9311
      @jukkakorhonen9311 3 года назад +1

      @@mikkoammer7810 Useimmat noista taitaa paremminkin tarkoittaa, että joku on vähän tärähtänyt. Tuulitunneli sen sijaan tarkoittaa typerää henkilöä.

  • @ThenameisAntti
    @ThenameisAntti 3 года назад +2

    "Mitä kuuluu" is no stranger than James Cagney gangster films from 1930's. You'll hear him say something like "whaddya hear, whaddya say?" :D Also to be heard in The Sopranos. So would be something of a Italian American New York thing?

  • @TheSchroedi2108
    @TheSchroedi2108 3 года назад +1

    Hello, i am from germany near stuttgart. we also use this phrase, but a bit different: "Der hat den Löffel weggeschmissen". This is swabian and means "he throwed the spoon away". Funny to hear that Finns seem to have the same black humor.

  • @mrqz77
    @mrqz77 3 года назад +5

    Hi,
    I must admit I'm slightly disappointed in these news.. But.. I understand where you are coming from and at least you left door open for some Finland related stuff in the future anyway. :)
    I think you should do, what you feel is easy and doable! Stay safe and enjoy your journey!

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +2

      Hi! Thank you for your support! I appreciate it

  • @SuperDalton72
    @SuperDalton72 3 года назад

    Take it behind the sauna is related to go at the backyard or street and fight one an other off, But the cool with finns they warn you before your stepping on there toes.

  • @stephanieb663
    @stephanieb663 3 года назад

    Finnish is so beautiful!

  • @humppapomppa1186
    @humppapomppa1186 3 года назад

    k-ruoka.fi or foodie.fi lets you see the two biggest grocerie store chains and their real prices, and not "online prices" but actual store prices.

  • @jarmoeklund8553
    @jarmoeklund8553 3 года назад +1

    Suomenkieli on yllätyksiä täynnä :D Älä rakas tyttö lopeta, vanha mies Suomesta tykkäs sun videoista. Lot a paljon!

  • @PekkaSiltala
    @PekkaSiltala 3 года назад +1

    Viedä saunan taakse or Saunan takana on tilaa. Pet animals (and likes) were killed out of sight, typically in countryside behind the sauna.

  • @lukemoody6299
    @lukemoody6299 2 года назад

    Where have you gone? We miss your videos!!

  • @muumiveikko
    @muumiveikko 3 года назад +6

    How about finnish thursday?

  • @arihalttu8949
    @arihalttu8949 3 года назад +1

    Hi Rachel....such a shame that you wont do any Finnish Fridays anymore....but i give you a few more Finnish phrases......."Ahkeruus kovankin onnen voittaa".(Diligence winns over fortune to win)....."Ei kukaan ole kuurompi kuin se, joka ei tahdo kuulla"(No one is deafer than one who does not want to hear)......"Parempi laiha sopu kuin lihava riita"(Better a lean compromise than fat dispute)......

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +1

      I like those! Thank you ❤️ I’ll still post finnish content though. Thanks for your support

    • @arihalttu8949
      @arihalttu8949 3 года назад

      @@WildwoodVagabond ❤️❤️❤️.....

    • @izzardclips9350
      @izzardclips9350 3 года назад

      I've always thought that kova onni means actually hardships and bad luck, not the opposite in that saying. like having kova onni is paska mäihä.

  • @Spale80
    @Spale80 3 года назад +2

    Warden Norton yelled "Lord, it's a miracle. Man up and vanished like a fart in the wind" in shawshank redempition. If the wind is called Sirocco, then the fart(meaning Andy Dufresne) would have indeed disappeared in to Sahara...

  • @albinbuster7770
    @albinbuster7770 3 года назад

    One that hasnt been said yet is "pistetään mylly pystyyn" literally translated: "lets build a windmill" and practically it means "im going to fight you". Im a new subscriber and i was sad at first when i read that this was going to be the last finnish friday, but i understand. The best content comes if one does a video about something one is passionate about doing, not because one is forced to do it. Have a good weekend Rachel :)

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +1

      Thanks for you feedback and for sharing the phrase! I hope you’ll stick around. I’m still going to post some Finnish content. Take care and much love

  • @timolukkaroinen6678
    @timolukkaroinen6678 3 года назад

    Thank you. You have so. many items. Jatka videoiden tekoa,

  • @Aurinkohirvi
    @Aurinkohirvi 3 года назад +1

    Thumb up ending Finnish Friday! More freedom is better way to go. I was thinking from very starters things like that which would force one make a video in certain interval, they start to feel like a job. Some that I use:
    "Ulkona kuin lumiukko." "I'm out like a snowman." Means I have no clue what is happening.
    "Eteenpäin, sano mummo lumessa!" "Forward, said grandma in the snow!" When I continue after an interrupt, or to cheer myself to do something.
    "Olla viilipyttynä." "To be like a pot of soured milk". To be cool, to be like nothing happened.

  • @Saturinus
    @Saturinus 3 года назад +1

    Se koira älähtää, johon kalikka kalahtaa.
    "That dogs yelps, that is hit by a piece of wood."
    I think it has a similar meaning as "the lady doth protest too much".

  • @timolukkaroinen6678
    @timolukkaroinen6678 3 года назад

    Olet ihana.

  • @jonip94
    @jonip94 3 года назад

    Nice video again. I would love to see more of you! If you need any help with that research, just ask anything and i will help :)

  • @peterarmoton2685
    @peterarmoton2685 3 года назад

    Lähteä kuin hauki rannasta, leave like a spike from the beach. it means You are leaving fast from situation, or you are judt fast.

  • @MrAatami
    @MrAatami 3 года назад

    Kuin lasta löisi - Like beating a child
    It's dark, but what makes it funny to me is the English "Like stealing candy from a baby"... Finns have a bit different approach. I laughed pretty hard when I read English translation of Finnish idioms.

    • @MrAatami
      @MrAatami 3 года назад

      (olis taas)Kirveelle käyttöä - (once again)a job/use for the axe
      Olis taas saunan takana kirveelle käyttöä/töitä. "Kirveellä" also acceptable, but that's more like if the axe was a person

  • @magicofshootingstar5825
    @magicofshootingstar5825 3 года назад

    About the price comparison: there is pages like foodie.fi where you can choose which ever s-market-chain shop and look prices of things they sell. There are similar pages for other chains too but I think that is easiest. I don't though know if there is option to use it in English, so it might be hard to use...

  • @janikarkkainen3904
    @janikarkkainen3904 3 года назад

    My friend once took a crank I had lying around, went to the kitchen and took a spoon, and then said "Hey, hey, watch this" and proceeded to throw his crank, throw the spoon to the corner, and kicked empty space. So in Finnish it would be "heitti lusikan nurkkaan", "heitti veivinsä" and "potkaisi tyhjää" which are all idioms for saying someone has died. It was so stupid I hadn't laughed that much in a big while and even after years I keep remembering it every now and then and it still tickles my laughing nerves....

  • @HeysiriB
    @HeysiriB 3 года назад +1

    Good stuff honey!

  • @thomaskaldstrom5194
    @thomaskaldstrom5194 3 года назад

    Thanx..looking forward to next update

  • @zabnat
    @zabnat 3 года назад +1

    My favorite at the moment is "Sillä ei ole kaikki muumit kanootissa." Which is as mixture of phrases my friend taught her step daughter (who is not Finnish) just to mess with her.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      I like that!

    • @NearCry91
      @NearCry91 2 года назад

      There's also versions "Sillä ei ole kaikki muumit laaksossa" and "Sillä ei ole kaikki inkkarit kanootissa". Both basically mean someone is dumb.

  • @80009
    @80009 3 года назад

    I have never heard of this "lumilapio" way of saying hello.
    I am from Huittinen. There is a saying "Hullimies Huittisista syö enemmän kuin tienaa. Syö rautaa ja paskantaa kettingiä".

  • @frankmcfrank392
    @frankmcfrank392 3 года назад

    How about ”Mulla on takki tyhjä” - my coat is empty. Thanks for your nice vlogs!

  • @JainMonroe
    @JainMonroe 3 года назад

    minä en ole sokerista tai emme ole sokerista
    I'm not from or we are not from sugar so it means when there is no umbrella or raincoat and you have to be outside in the rain
    and sugar usually melts in the liquid

  • @mikitz
    @mikitz 3 года назад

    I suppose my personal favorite has to be 'voi vittujen kevät'. You can only guess what that literally means.

  • @pernarutto
    @pernarutto Год назад

    Fridays coming and Im going to pull my ass over shoulder( get drunk)

  • @leenalaine325
    @leenalaine325 3 года назад

    This was so funny! 😀 👍 And quite sad that this was the last finnish friday. ☹️ This was so funny. I can't leave any favorite phrases cos I litterly hate finnish phrases.... 🙈 Yes now I said it. 😀 And yes I know many country's has their own, but I just don't like ours... 😀🤷‍♀️ I like your channel. Hearing the main differences between America and Finland, and what is like to live in America after you lived in Finland. I would love to travel some day in Texas or San Francisco or New York... So many places I would love to visit and see. 😊❤️ Stay healthy and greetings from very gray Finland, only Lapland has have snow right now, I think! 💙 🇫🇮 Lumilapio! 🙋‍♀️😀💙

  • @honkeydolemite9025
    @honkeydolemite9025 3 года назад +2

    Sataa kuin Esterin perseestä. Is just common finnish vulgarity and rakishness, yeah that is part of us that does not so commonly show but since in our language all most anything can have double meaning so this is no surprise.

  • @juhomuuraiskangas
    @juhomuuraiskangas 3 года назад

    Se on annettu, mikä on tarjottu.
    it is given what is offered/provided/served. It is used if you ask if a guest would like something while visit. And the guest refuse your offer. Especially for the elderly it is important to always offer something to the guests. It also has a bit of irony. Even if guest try to refuse serving. She/he has already enjoyed it.😄

  • @TheEdnar83
    @TheEdnar83 3 года назад

    A couple more of my personal favorite idioms for you.
    Kiinnostaa kuin kilo kiviä - As interesting as a kilogram of rocks (this one should be quite self explanatory. Used to indicate complete lack of interest in the topic of discussion)
    Vuonna miekka ja kilpi - In the year of sword and shield (used to allude to a somewhat vague point in history, even personal history.)
    Vetää herne nenään - To snort a pea up ones nose (Used to refer to someone else who has gotten unnecessarily worked up and/or angry over something.)
    Kusta hunajaa - To pee/urinate honey (Used to describe someone quite obviously very pleased and happy about something. Perhaps up to point of smugness)
    These Finland vids have been very interesting and funny. Hope you make one ocationally, but I fully understand not wanting to make it this Friday thing a permanent staple.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      Haha I like those! Thanks for your support. I will definitely post more finnish content. Take care!

    • @Aurinkohirvi
      @Aurinkohirvi 3 года назад

      I think "kusta hunajaa" is however used of something that is supposedly very amazingly wonderful. But it is used sarcastically, sourly. "That something even pisses honey". It is so wonderful even its piss is honey. That's how I've heard it used.

    • @TheEdnar83
      @TheEdnar83 3 года назад

      @@Aurinkohirvi Interesting, I've mostly heard it used earnestly, but with that slight undertone of maybe you shouldn't be quite that pleased with yourself. Not quite with sarcasm or with a need to drag the person being spoken about down.
      Regional difference? Or maybe just how it's evolved over time? Or just difference with a small group of speakers from my immediate surroundings? Who knows :)

    • @Aurinkohirvi
      @Aurinkohirvi 3 года назад

      @@TheEdnar83 More than one way to use, apparently.

  • @lintu25
    @lintu25 3 года назад

    And its pieru siperiaan.Gulak camp, ever heard?

  • @spooksmysteries4971
    @spooksmysteries4971 2 года назад

    In building sites it has been the normal way to say "jotenki sillee joo" Those men tired ad death itself. Please, roll yourself a 40kg object for 10 hours and ask then are you tired :)

  • @dosetti
    @dosetti 3 года назад

    Lots of no so very nice words you normally don't use in your vocabulary in English.. Nothing wrong about that, they are still words. Thanks for the series!

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      Lol thanks for watching! Yeah normally I don’t use those words but those translations are really funny to me

  • @Ravdna
    @Ravdna 3 года назад

    It’s easy to compare prices. We have these internet pages basically every big grocery stores. For example S and K markets have their own. www.k-ruoka.fi and www.foodie.fi.

  • @tuomassuikkanen3605
    @tuomassuikkanen3605 3 года назад

    Thanx Rachael for the vid. I've watched all your videos and I'm surprised you didn't mention/know "keitetty monessa liemessä" ( "boiled in many broths"), because I think it depicts your (and my) story of life. You probably get it but just to make sure: someone who's endured a lot of different hardships. I'm not sure about my English though..boiled in? boiled at?? =)

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      I haven’t heard that! But I can 100% relate 😅 and boiled in is right!

  • @urbanhanninen4777
    @urbanhanninen4777 3 года назад

    My Finnish parents, like all couples, argued occasionally. When my mother had enough she would tell my father "haista kissa paskaa". Translated - she is telling him to "go sniff cat shit". She was from Karelia and was one of the war children who had to flee ahead of the Russian advance in 1939. Maybe the saying is regional to the SE corner of Suomi?

  • @honkeydolemite9025
    @honkeydolemite9025 3 года назад

    Viedä sauna taakse. To take you to place out side of sight to put you out of your miseries. Also often in Saunan takana was peruna maa, so you would end up as nutrient for potatoes.

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад

      Ehhh ouch lol

    • @zabnat
      @zabnat 3 года назад

      Out of sight yes, but from the story I heard there was often a compost behind the sauna. I mean you want the dead bodies to molder first before using them as nutrients for potatoes.

  • @SuperDalton72
    @SuperDalton72 3 года назад

    toss the spon the corner in swedish is throw the towel in. type your finito.

  • @mikorossi1959
    @mikorossi1959 3 года назад +1

    "Throw the spoon in the corner". You're right it means, in short, died. The Finnish Einstain explained the matter completely wrong when he said that it was a surrender to something! You are beauty-Person.

    • @magicofshootingstar5825
      @magicofshootingstar5825 3 года назад +1

      I as Finn also would say too that it's giving up. Maybe it's used differently in different parts of Finland 🤔🙂

  • @jaakkomakelainen3822
    @jaakkomakelainen3822 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Sugared version of "persaukinen" can be like "Oon ihan peeaa."
    You can food prices in Finland from here: www.foodie.fi/products

  • @peterarmoton2685
    @peterarmoton2685 3 года назад

    om learning about myself😀

  • @honkeydolemite9025
    @honkeydolemite9025 3 года назад +1

    Moni kakku päältä kaunis. Things are not all ways what they appear. When I studied hospitality I hade this old time teacher who told as story how this government employee was retiring and ordered cloudberry cream cake for his comrades, the catchs was that the cake were to be filled with pickled herring.

  • @Afrohare
    @Afrohare 3 года назад

    "Perse on niin auki että viheltää." "Uppos ku puukko mummoon." "Sopii kuin isä äitiin." "Tuijottaa kuin mykkä vittua." "Hikoilee kuin huora kirkossa." "Putos kuin eno veneestä." "Lähti kuin kuppa Töölöstä." "Potkas tyhjää." "Kusta silmään." "Puhdas kuin papin lakanat." ...god, I love our language!

  • @dragonfairy22
    @dragonfairy22 3 года назад

    I didn't even watch this video yet, but I have to break some news to you (if you still remember me): *my boyfriend just told me he seriously considers moving to Finland* 🤯🤯🤯🤯 I can't even tell you how happy that made me. I literally couldn't have even dreamed of this, because he always said it would never happen. Omg omg omg. I have to go to bed so I will watch your video tomorrow, lol 😹

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +1

      Haha awesomenessssss!! That’s such good news! Yes I remember you! I have wondered how you are doing ❤️🥰 congratulations

    • @dragonfairy22
      @dragonfairy22 3 года назад

      @@WildwoodVagabond Thank you, that's nice of you 🤭💖 Now I feel like maybe we could even meet one day, it would be fun! 🤩🤭
      P.S. Laughed so hard watching this video 😂🤣🤣 great job! 👏

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +1

      @@dragonfairy22 haha thanks 😊 yesss I hope to meet you someday when I finally get to come to Finland or if you visit the States again somewhere near Texas! That’d be cool! ❤️🥰✌🏼

  • @zabnat
    @zabnat 3 года назад +3

    The first one is especially funny because it seems that almost half of the English speaking world hates raisins (or at least the loudest bunch). All the memes and stuff where they think it is chocolate chip something but then it is raisins and they are so angry. And my understanding is that you pick the raisins out so you can eat the raisins and leave the bread.

    • @sikkepossu
      @sikkepossu 3 года назад +1

      Indeed. As a Finn, I personally hate raisins in 'pulla' so I would definitelly leave the raisins behind and only eat the 'pulla'. Raisins are ok by themselves but not when they have been cooked.

    • @seetaami5810
      @seetaami5810 3 года назад

      This adage can be well understood both ways to the intended effect: either you "pick the cherries" from a larger corpus, or you discard the parts that you dislike from the desired whole. Either way, the metaphora can be used to describe intellectual incinserity, cognitive bias, or even (voluntary) (self)censorship, - just the degree varies according to the interpretation. Therefore, any prudent writer should disclose their raisinal preferences, whenever taking someone to task for a pullapoika argument. #pullapoikastrawman
      I also prefer my 'pulla' without 'rusinat'. Go, pulla, go, and become the 'pitko' of your dreams! Rusinat gonna rusinate.

  • @timomastosalo
    @timomastosalo 3 года назад

    In the old days many people had their own personal spoon, when metaö was expensive, and the spoons were wooden. So those spoons were so personal, that a person would only depart from it when dying.

  • @88dnw
    @88dnw 3 года назад +1

    Hahah :D This video is so funny. :D I'd say you love Finns. :D

    • @WildwoodVagabond
      @WildwoodVagabond  3 года назад +2

      Yes I dooo. I wish I was a Finn lol better a Finn than Americ-in 😄

  • @timolehto6234
    @timolehto6234 9 месяцев назад

    Like love very much your videos. Maybe your Finnish friends have taught you the most freak Finnish sayings, not heard commonly in Finland, but sounds funny when you are saying them and I realise their litteral meaning :-). Olen asunut jonkin aikaa San Francisco's ja pidin siitä, että ihmiset olivat ihanan sosiaalisia ja tosiaankin ihan vieraille saattoi puhua vaikka bussipysäkillä. Kadulla olevat kerjäläiset olivat shokki minulle, mutta USA:ssa on 50 osavaltiota ja tuskin kaikissa niistä sosiaalinen segregaatio on niin räikeää kuin Kaliforniassa. Luulen että meillä suomalaisilla on paljon hyvää opittavaa amerikkalsesta kulttuurista ja myös vise versa.

  • @paulpasanen1498
    @paulpasanen1498 3 года назад +1

    In Canada, Canadain Fins say Haista nappa. The real swear is much worse.

    • @martinklopnof5284
      @martinklopnof5284 3 года назад +1

      What is "nappa", and what does it smell like?
      😇
      Joka viisas on, se kuulkaan, että hän viisaammaksi tulis; ja joka toimellinen on, se ottakoon neuvon,
      Että hän ymmärtäis sananlaskut ja niiden selityksen, viisasten opin ja heidän tapauksensa. Pro 1:5-6 KR1776

  • @ganjanaut
    @ganjanaut 3 года назад

    The papers love tho :D

  • @artokautiainen
    @artokautiainen 3 года назад

    Lumilapio 🤚😊
    "Lyö kuin vierasta sikaa" means "beats like a foreign pig." In finnish, six can mean a number or a tree where a pig can be an animal or an adjective. It was just a coincidence that it was the word pig that took on a new meaning.

  • @timomastosalo
    @timomastosalo 3 года назад

    Mitä sinulle kuuluu? = (lit.) 'What sounds to you?'
    'What are you hearing?' would be: Mitä sinä kuulet?
    - The point is that life is talking to you (sinuLLE), in stead of you being actively the listener. It's so much what you do, but what's done to you.
    Finnish has more verbal phrases like this than English, where you are the experiencer, ('experiencee'), not the causer or maker of the action. Some things just happen to you without your choice.
    Emotions or bodily functions are often seen like this: Minua janottaa ,' I'm thirsty' lit. 'Me thirsts', as in (something unknown or not mentioned) makes me thirsty'. Jokin janottaa minua = 'Something makes me thirsty', lit. 'Something thirsts me.' So if the person is said like Minua/Minut (me) etc. you're the target, the object of the action. So notice the sentences where I is not the basic Minä (etc,) - then it means that Finnish sees it like I'm not causing the action, I'm in another role in it.
    Like in Minulle kuuluu hyvää

  • @Erkilmarl
    @Erkilmarl 3 года назад

    Kuuluu + sinulle is one of those phrases that musn't be translated literally, in this case as "hear". If you ask "Mitä sinulle kuuluu?" it's of course "How are you?" (But in Finland and in all Europe it usually means "Please tell me what you have been doing. I'm prepared to listen."). As a negative "Se ei kuulu sinulle." it means "It's none of your business." But that's only one error. Your videos are great.

  • @oo.llpee.7457
    @oo.llpee.7457 3 года назад

    Someone probably told this already, but Esteri was firetruck's water pump a long time ago, thus the saying. And at least here where I live, we say it "Tulee vettä kuin Esterin pers****ä", which of course means the same, but there is subtle difference using "tulee" instead of "sataa".

  • @OwnedByGalatea
    @OwnedByGalatea 3 года назад

    In my work place, (painter messes up) its sutta ja sekundaa.
    Translates roughly to... wolf and shit!!!! (do it again) well, we do it again ;D