Finnish grammar: genitive

From UniLang Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search

The genitive is a case that indicates possession (i.e. Mervin kitara = Mervi's Guitar). The genitive case usually has a weak grade consonant graduation in the inflectional stem (i.e. onni -> onnen). Note that the word order in Finnish for the genitive case usually has the possessor first, and the object being possessed proceeding. However, poetically this can be reversed.

Kreikan meri
Greece's sea
meri Kreikan
sea of Greece

Note the second one is not used often unless in songs or in poems.

Contents

Genitive Singular

The genitive singular in Finnish is simply marked by a -n at the end of the object that indicates possession.

Basic form In English Singular
maa country maa/n
tuli fire tule/n
mies man miehe/n
kone machine konee/n

Here's an example:

Jani/n auto on valkoinen
Jani's car is white.

Genitive Plural

The plural form of the genitive case is the most complex in the Finnish language, as the partitive of the word is usually the determining factor of the ending stem. Compare the following examples:

  • If the partitive plural of a word ends with -a or , then the genitive plural ending is -en.
  • If the partitive plural is -ta or -tä, the genitive plural is -den. This ending can also be replaced with -tten.
  • If the partitive singular is -ta or -tä, the genitive plural ending is -ten.


Use the table below to compare different words in the genitive plural. Note that the 'partitive' column indicates the partitive plural of a word, unless indicated with a *, which will then mean it's the partitive singular. The 'inflection stem' column will use the genitive singular.

Basic form In English Inflection stem* Partitive Genitive Pl Or (rarely used)
maa country maa/n ma/i/ta ma/i/den
--
peruna potato peruna/n peruno/i/ta peruno/i/den
--
käsi hand käde/n käs/i/ä käs/i/en kät/ten
nainen woman naise/n nais/i/a nais/i/en
--
nainen woman naise/n *nais/ta nais/ten nais/i/en
kieli language kiele/n *kiel/tä kiel/ten kiel/i/en

Some examples are:

Auto/j/en katot ovat keltaisia
The cars' roofs are yellow
Talo/j/en sisällä on lämmin
The houses' inside at is warm (i.e. it's warm inside the houses)
Ma/i/den liput ovat erivärisiä
The countries' flags are different colors
Use/i/den mielestä tämä lause on hyödyllinen
In many people's opinion this sentence is helpful
Nais/ten laukut ovat pieniä
The womens' bags are small.
Las/ten hampaissa on reikiä
In the children's teeth is cavities (i.e. The childrens' teeth have cavities)

Possessive Suffixes

Finnish does not have stand alone possessive pronouns (such as my), so to show possession, one must use the genitive forms of personal pronouns.

Personal Pro In English Genitive form In English
minä I minu/n my
sinä you sinu/n your
hän he, she häne/n his, her
me we meidä/n our
te you (pl.) teidä/n your (pl.)
he they heidä/n their


The word being possessed also takes an ending corresponding to the personal pronoun. Sometimes the genitive form of the personal pronoun can be dropped altogether to be replaced by the possessive suffix.

Singular Plural
First Person -ni -mme
Second Person -si -nne
Third Person -nsa or -nsä -nsa or -nsä


Some examples showing this would be:

(Minun) kissani on hullu
My cat is crazy
(Sinun) päässäsi ovat kuulokkeet
There are headphones on your head
(Meidän) silmämme ovat sokaistut.
Our eyes are blinded.
(Teidän) kuninkaanne on kuollut!
Your king is dead! (Plural 'your')

Note that the personal pronouns (in brackets) can also be left out. However, colloquially they are often used, and the suffixes are dropped.

Where does the possessive suffix go, when combined with other suffixes?

With the grammatical cases the possessive suffix goes second:

Ystävälleni (allative)
Ystävältäni (ablative)
Ystäväkseni (translative)
Ystävänäni (essive)

With other kinds of suffixes the possessive suffix goes first:

Ystäväni
Ystävänihän
Ystävänikin

External Links

Touko Pouko - Säteilysuojakypärä - An excellent demonstration of the genitive form.


>> Languages >> Finnish >> Finnish grammar >> Finnish cases

Personal tools

« Return to the main site