Finland Languages

Since Finnish was not an official language in Finland until 1863, most records were written in Swedish. To do research in these records, you will need to know some Swedish and Finnish key words and phrases. Also, be aware that Orthodox church records were written in Russian until after Finnish independence. The Finnish language is spoken by the majority of the population in Finland and by ethnic Finns elsewhere.

Finland recognizes the following as official languages: Finnish, Swedish, three Sami languages: Northern (Poooissame/davvisámi), Inari (Inarinsaame/anarâškielâ), Skolt (Koltansaame/sääʹmǩiõll); Romani, Karelian, and Finnish Sign Language. About 70% of the population speaks English as a second language.

When you are looking up names or words in Finnish dictionaries or indexes, it is important to know that the Finnish alphabet has three letters that follow the letter z: å, ä, and ö. The letter å does not occur in native Finnish words, but many personal and geographical names of Swedish origin use this letter.

For word lists to help your research in Finnish records, see Finnish Genealogical Word List and Swedish Genealogical Word List.

Vowels
There are eight vowel in Finnish, a, e, i, o, u, y, ä, ö, and å which is found in Swedish words. Finnish has 16 diphthongs of two types. In the first type there is more stress on the first vowel, and in the second, slightly more stress on the second vowel. A double vowel is twice as long as a single vowel. Double vowel combinations are: aa, ää, ee, ii, oo, öö, uu, and yy.
 * First group: au, ou, iu, eu, äy, öy. äi, öi, yi, ui, ei, ai, oi
 * Second group: uo, yö, ie

Consonants
Double consonants are pronounced separately. The first is the final letter of one syllable and the second is the initial letter of the next syllable.

Accent
The stress always falls on the first syllable, even with words of foreign origin.
 * Helsinki (HEL-sin-ki)
 * Sibelius (SI-be-lius)
 * Räikkönen (RÄIK-könen)

Parts of Speech
Unlike English, Finnish does not have indefinite or definite articles (a/an/the). Finnish uses the following parts of speech: • 3

Language Aids
The Finnish Genealogical Word List and the Swedish Genealogical Word List contain key words to know for doing research in Finland. The following language dictionaries can also help you in your research. You can find these and similar material at many research libraries.


 * Alanne, V. S. Suomalais-englantilainen suursanakirja (Great Finnish-English Dictionary). 3rd ed. Porvoo: Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö, 1968. (FS Library film 1224706 item 3)
 * Björkman, C. G. Svensk-Engelsk Ordbok (Swedish- English Dictionary). Stockholm: P. A. Norstedt, 1889. (FS Library film 1224734 item 1) Swedish spelling was reformed in 1906; therefore, this book includes words as they were spelled prior to 1906.
 * Ernolv, Carl. Svensk-Engelsk Ordbok (Swedish- English Dictionary). Stockholm: Svenska Bokförlaget Norstedts, 1947. (FS Library film 1124531 item 12)

To find other language aids in the Locality Search of the FamilySearch Catalog, look under:


 * FINLAND- LANGUAGE AND LANGUAGES - DICTIONARIES


 * SWEDEN- LANGUAGE AND LANGUAGES - DICTIONARIES

You may also find language aids in the Subject Search under:


 * FINNISH LANGUAGE- DICTIONARIES - ENGLISH


 * SWEDISH LANGUAGE- DICTIONARIES - ENGLISH

Online Finnish Language Resources

 * Mustgo.com: Finnish Language - Structure, Writing & Alphabet
 * Uusi kielemme: Finnish Grammar
 * MyLanguages.org: Learn Finnish
 * Lexilogos.com: Finnish Dictionary
 * Vanhan kirjasuomen sanakirja (Dictionary of old Finnish)
 * Bab.la: English-Finnish dictionary
 * Google Translate