Questions & Answers about Luotan tähän kurssiin.
Because luotan is the 1st person singular present tense form of the verb luottaa (to trust).
- minä luotan = I trust
- sinä luotat = you (sg) trust
- hän luottaa = he/she trusts
So the -n is the normal personal ending for I in the present tense.
The dictionary form is luottaa. In many Finnish verbs, consonant gradation changes the “strong” grade in the dictionary form to a “weak” grade in some conjugated forms.
Here: luottaa → luotan ( tt → t )
This is a common pattern (strong grade in the infinitive, weaker grade in some present forms).
Because luottaa typically requires its complement in the illative case (meaning roughly into / onto / in(to) in form, but idiomatically trust in).
So you say: luottaa johonkin = to trust in something.
- tämä (this) in the illative singular is tähän
Whereas tätä is the partitive form (used with many other verbs/contexts), but not the normal case after luottaa.
Because kurssiin is the illative singular of kurssi. The illative often answers into what? / to what? (and with luottaa, it’s the required case).
For many -i ending nouns like kurssi, the illative singular is formed with -in, and you typically get a long vowel:
- kurssi → kurssiin (roughly: add -in, and i lengthens to ii)
Because tähän is a demonstrative (like this) modifying the noun kurssi, and Finnish requires case agreement inside the noun phrase: the modifier takes the same case and number as the noun.
So:
- nominative: tämä kurssi
- illative: tähän kurssiin
- inessive: tässä kurssissa, etc.
Not in the typical “direct object” sense (like something you do/affect). With luottaa, the noun phrase is best thought of as a case-governed complement (often called verb rection): the verb requires illative.
So it functions more like trust in X than like a direct object.
You can change it for emphasis or contrast, because Finnish word order is fairly flexible:
- Luotan tähän kurssiin. (neutral)
- Tähän kurssiin luotan. (emphasizes this course specifically)
- Luotan kurssiin. (more general: I trust the course)
The case endings keep the roles clear even if the order changes.
It’s optional. The verb form luotan already shows the subject is I.
- Luotan tähän kurssiin. (very common)
- Minä luotan tähän kurssiin. (adds emphasis: I do / as for me)
You still use luottaa + illative:
- I trust you (singular): Luotan sinuun. (sinä → sinuun, illative)
- I trust him/her: Luotan häneen.
- I trust my friend: Luotan ystävääni. (often illative-looking form; the key idea is still trust in someone)
In general: Luotan + (person/thing) in illative.
Primary stress in Finnish is almost always on the first syllable of each word:
- LUO-tan TÄ-hän KURS-siin
Also note vowel length matters: kurssiin has a long ii sound, which is important for meaning and correctness.