Difference between revisions of "Language/Finnish/Pronunciation/Alphabet-and-Pronunciation"

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==Authors==
==Authors==
[http://polyglotclub.com/member/alexofwermland Alexofwermland]
[http://polyglotclub.com/member/alexofwermland Alexofwermland]
{{#seo:
|title=The Finnish Alphabet
        |keywords=letters, pronunciation, alphabet, a, b, c
|description=In this lesson you will learn how to write and pronounce the alphabet in Finnish
        |og:image=http://wiki.polyglotclub.com/wiki/images/b/b0/Finnish-alphabet.jpg
}}
[[Category: Finnish/Beginner]]
[[Category: Alphabet-and-Pronunciation]]

Revision as of 15:26, 30 October 2016

Finnish-alphabet.jpg

Hei!

I'll try to tell you about pronunciation of Finnish.

In common, it's easier than English writing/reading system. You read words precisely as they are written. But there are also some vital details you should always remember.

Alphabet

The alphabet in Finnish is composed of 29 letters:

a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o, p, q, r, s, t, u, v, w, x, y, z, å, ä ja ö.

The letters š and ž can occur only in loan words.

Letter Pronunciation
a [a:]
b [be:]
c [se:]
d [de:]
e [e:]
f [æf]
g [ge:]
h [ho:]
i [i:]
j [ji:]
k [ko:]
l [æl]
m [æm]
n [æn]
o [o:]
p [pe:]
q [ku:]
r [ær]
s [æs]
t [te:]
u [u:]
v [ve:]
w [ve:], [kaksoisve:]
x [æks]
y [y:]
z [tset]
å [o:], [ruotsalainen o:]
ä [æ:]
ö [ø:]

Long and short sounds

As soon as Finnish uses really few sounds, the length of similar sounds is important. As example - tapaan sinut "I meet you" and tapan sinut "I murder you".

ee, aa, oo, uu

So if you see ee, aa, oo, uu - read them loooong . Usual letters you read in a usual manner.

It is a bit trickier with long konsomants , that are also important. Try NOT to read them as two discreet k-k, t-t etc. Try that instead :

  • Set your mouth as if you are ready to say it.
  • Take a very short pause.
  • Say the sound - but strongly.

Congratulations, you've done it! :)

Perhaps it would be good if you train a bit with kk, pp, tt.

mm, ss, rr, nn, ll

Sounds mm, ss, rr, nn, ll don't need such an articulation, just say them a bit longer.

Ä, Y, Ö

Ä, Y, Ö are authentic for Finnish.

  • Ä resembles "cAt" or "bAd" in English.
  • Y resembles German Über or French vU
  • Ö resembles the same sound in German

Video

Authors

Alexofwermland