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American Finnish, or is a form of the
Finnish language Finnish (endonym: or ) is a Finnic languages, Finnic language of the Uralic languages, Uralic language family, spoken by the majority of the population in Finland and by ethnic Finns outside of Finland. Finnish is one of the two official langu ...
spoken in North America. It has been heavily influenced by the English language. American Finnish was used actively until the 1950s and after that it has been declining, and Finnish Americans have been switching to English language, English. Even some basic phrases like 'that's right' were borrowed from English. The form of speech was studied by Pertti Virtaranta in 1960, and the first American Finnish dictionary was made in 1992. It has influence from English both in syntax and vocabulary. In 2013 Finnish was spoken by 26,000 people in their homes. In the town of Oulu, Wisconsin, there are documented third-generation speakers of American Finnish, and in Stanton Township, Michigan, there are children who speak the language. American Finnish has also retained loanwords from Swedish language, Swedish which modern Finnish language, Finnish lost. Those in the second and third generations who speak American Finnish are usually bilingual and tend to use English more often. There have been some negative attitudes to "impurities" in American Finnish; however, American Finns usually consider it a language of their own and dislike linguistic purism. Finnish Americans sometimes have problems understanding Finnish. There is not much areal variation in American Finnish; however, first-, second- and third-generation speakers have more variation in their speech, especially as the amount of English influence differs in generations.


Features

There are also grammatical differences from Finnish, such as consonant gradation. In American Finnish the letter k remains unchanged, unlike in Finnish: 'law', 'laws' (Finnish: , ). And in American Finnish the first person plural ending has often been dropped: 'we can't' (Finnish language, Finnish: ). Another difference in American Finnish is that the sound does not change into an when conjugated: 'language', 'languages' (Finnish: , ).


Vocabulary

American Finnish has many loanwords from English, but has also retained some older Swedish loanwords that Finnish lost.


Grammar


Cases

In American Finnish the possessive suffixes are rarely used.


Examples of American Finnish

'There are more of them, but they are moose hunting.' 'to fix' 'Now I have to call to Albert fast.'


See also

* Finnish Americans * Finnish Canadians * Oulu, Wisconsin * Finglish


References


External links


American-Finnish recordings (in Finnish)

Amerikansuomalaisten kieli (about Fingelska, in Finnish)

American Finnish examples at Wikisource

American Finnish incubator plus

Dictionary of American Finnish
{{Authority control Finnic languages Finnish dialects Languages of the United States Languages of Canada