Language Monday: Finnish
February 12, 2018
Finnish is the language spoken by about 90 percent of the people living in the northern European nation of Finland. Finnish is also an official language in neighboring Sweden, where about five percent of the people speak the unusual tongue. Finnish is spoken in parts of Russia and in far northern Norway, and a few Finnish-speaking communities exist in the United States and Canada. Finnish is one of the 24 official languages of the European Union, but it is one of the least used.
For much of Finland’s history, the country was part of Sweden, and Swedish was the official language. Finland was controlled by Russia from 1809 until 1917, but Finnish gained official status in the region in 1902. Today, Finland has two official languages—Finnish and Swedish. Most of the people speak Finnish, and many speak Swedish. Most of the Swedish-speaking people live on the south and west coasts and on the offshore Aland Islands. Many Finns also speak English.
Finnish and Swedish belong to different language families. Swedish is an Indo-European language, while Finnish is part of the Uralic language family, a small group that includes Estonian and Hungarian (also called Magyar). Languages in this family can be found in northern Europe and northwestern Asia. Finnish has a reputation for being one of the world’s most difficult languages to learn. There are seven main dialects in Finland, each with its own sub-dialects and slang terms. Finnish has fourteen noun cases. There are six verb types, each classed by its stem. The stems alter as the verbs are conjugated. The language modifies and inflects nouns, adjectives, pronouns, numerals, and verbs, depending on their usage in a sentence. The Finnish alphabet has 29 letters, 26 of which are commonly used. Finnish has no gender pronouns.
Unlike other European languages, Finnish has few words that have made their way into the English language. The main exception is sauna, the name for a special kind of steam bath popular for both cleansing and relaxation. The Finnish word for Monday is maanantai <<MAN en ty>>.
During the Middle Ages (A.D. 400′s through the 1400′s), Finnish was almost exclusively a spoken language. In writing, Finnish speakers used a form of German for business, Swedish for government, and Latin for religious activities. The first known written document in Finnish dates from the early 1200’s. The first comprehensive Finnish writing system was created in the 1500’s. It was based on German, Latin, and Swedish.
The father of the modern Finnish language was Elias Lonnrot, a folklore scholar. In the early 1800’s, Lonnrot made several journeys to eastern Finland, gathering ballads, lyrical songs, and chants that were part of Finnish oral tradition. He compiled this material into the Kalevala, which became the Finnish national epic (long narrative poem). The Kalevala had an enormous impact on the development of modern Finnish.