Breakdown of Ryhmä pitää pienen tauon parvekkeella.
Questions & Answers about Ryhmä pitää pienen tauon parvekkeella.
Which meaning of the verb pitää is used here?
Why is it tauon and not tauko or taukoa?
Finnish marks the object differently depending on aspect/completeness. Pitää pienen tauon uses the “total object” (genitive singular: tauon) to show a bounded, complete event: they take a (whole) short break.
- If you used the partitive taukoa (e.g., pitää pientä taukoa), it would suggest an ongoing activity or an unbounded amount of “having a break.”
- Bare nominative tauko is not used here; with a singular total object, Finnish uses the genitive (tauon).
Why is the adjective pieni in the form pienen?
Adjectives agree with their nouns in case and number. Since tauon is genitive singular, pieni also becomes genitive singular: pienen.
Mini-paradigm: nominative pieni, genitive pienen, partitive pientä.
Can I say Ryhmä pitää pientä taukoa parvekkeella? What changes?
Why is the verb singular (pitää) even though a group has many people?
What does parvekkeella mean compared to parvekkeelle and parvekkeelta?
They are locative cases with -l- (surface/“on/at” series):
- parvekkeella = on the balcony (static location)
- parvekkeelle = onto the balcony (movement to)
- parvekkeelta = from the balcony (movement from)
Why is it parvekkeella and not parvekkeessa?
Where does the double k in parvekkeella come from?
Are there articles in Finnish? How do I know if it means “a short break” or “the short break”?
Can I change the word order for emphasis, e.g., start with the place?
Yes. Word order is flexible for information structure. All of these are fine, with different emphasis:
- Ryhmä pitää pienen tauon parvekkeella. (neutral)
- Parvekkeella ryhmä pitää pienen tauon. (emphasizes location)
- Ryhmä parvekkeella pitää pienen tauon. (focus on which group) The core grammar (cases and agreement) stays the same.
How is pitää conjugated in the present tense?
- minä pidän
- sinä pidät
- hän / se pitää
- me pidämme
- te pidätte
- he / ne pitävät
Can I use ottaa instead of pitää for “take a break”?
Yes. Both are idiomatic:
- pitää (pieni) tauko = take/have a (short) break
- ottaa (pieni) tauko (often in passive/“let’s” form: otetaan pieni tauko) = take a (short) break
Nuance: ottaa can feel a bit more like “initiate” a break; pitää can feel like “hold/have” a break. In practice both are very common.
How would I say “The group likes the balcony”?
Use the “like” meaning of pitää with the elative case (-sta/-stä):
Ryhmä pitää parvekkeesta.
What happens if I start the sentence with Ryhmän pitää?
Then pitää likely has the necessity meaning (“must/has to”), and the logical subject appears in the genitive (Ryhmän). For example:
- Ryhmän pitää pitää pienen tauon parvekkeella. = The group must take a short break on the balcony.
You can avoid the double pitää by using another modal: Ryhmän täytyy pitää pieni/pienen tauko/tauon parvekkeella. (Both nominative and genitive objects are used in this modal construction; the genitive pienen tauon is very common.)
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