Questions & Answers about Minä menen syntymäpäiväjuhlaan.
Why does the sentence start with Minä? Do I have to include the pronoun in Finnish?
What form is menen, and how do I get it from the infinitive mennä?
Why is syntymäpäiväjuhlaan written as one long word? Can’t I split it?
Finnish commonly combines roots and case endings into one word. Here you have the compound noun syntymäpäivä (“birthday”) + juhla (“celebration/party”) and the illative case ending -an for motion “into/to.” You break it down as:
syntymä + päivä + juhla + -an → syntymäpäiväjuhlaan.
What does the ending -aan in juhlaan signify?
Why use singular juhla instead of the more common plural juhlat? Could I say syntymäpäiväjuhliin?
Both are possible. juhla (“celebration”) has a singular illative juhlaan. juhlat (“party”) is a plural noun that takes the plural illative juhliin. So you can equally say:
Menen syntymäpäiväjuhliin.
How do I pronounce syntymäpäiväjuhlaan, especially the ä?
Why isn’t there a word for “to,” as in English “to the party”?
Can I change the word order, for example say Syntymäpäiväjuhlaan menen?
Why doesn’t Minä get a case ending like -n? Don’t pronouns change for case?
If I want to ask “Where are you going?”, which word do I use?
Use the illative question word minne. For example:
Minne menet? (“To where are you going?”)
This matches the illative -an in juhlaan.
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