Breakdown of Ryhmä pitää pienen tauon parvekkeella.
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Questions & Answers about Ryhmä pitää pienen tauon parvekkeella.
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).
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.
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)
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.
- minä pidän
- sinä pidät
- hän / se pitää
- me pidämme
- te pidätte
- he / ne pitävät
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.
Use the “like” meaning of pitää with the elative case (-sta/-stä):
Ryhmä pitää parvekkeesta.
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.)