Tarkistan kalenterin aamulla ennen kuin lähden töihin.

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Questions & Answers about Tarkistan kalenterin aamulla ennen kuin lähden töihin.

Why is kalenteri in the form kalenterin?

Because tarkistaa (to check) typically takes a direct object, and in Finnish a “complete/definite” object is often in the genitive in the singular:

  • Tarkistan kalenterin. = I check the calendar / I’ll check the calendar (as a complete action).

If you used the partitive (kalenteria), it would suggest an “incomplete/ongoing/partial” checking (e.g., just browsing briefly or not as a finished whole).


Is Tarkistan present tense or future tense?

Formally it’s present tense, 1st person singular: tarkistan = I check / I am checking.
But Finnish present tense often also covers near-future meaning from context, especially with time expressions:

  • … aamulla makes it naturally understood as (I will) check in the morning.

Why is it aamulla and not aamu or aamussa?

aamulla is the adessive case (-lla/-llä), commonly used for times of day meaning in the morning / during the morning. It’s a very standard time expression:

  • aamulla = in the morning
  • similarly: illalla (in the evening), yöllä (at night; different case)

aamu is just the basic dictionary form (morning). aamussa (inessive) is not the usual way to express “in the morning” in everyday Finnish.


What does ennen kuin do, and why is kuin there?

ennen kuin is the fixed conjunction meaning before (introducing a clause).

  • ennen = before
  • kuin is required in this structure when a verb clause follows.

So:

  • ennen kuin lähden… = before I leave…

If you’re not using a clause but a noun phrase, you often use ennen + partitive instead:

  • ennen lähtöä = before leaving (lit. before departure)

Why is it lähden and not lähteä or lähten?

lähteä is the infinitive (to leave). In the sentence you need a finite verb (“I leave”), so:

  • lähden = I leave (1st person singular present)

The verb lähteä has a stem change in conjugation (a normal pattern for this verb):

  • lähteälähde-lähden, lähdet, lähtee, etc.

Why is it töihin and not työhön (or töissä)?

töihin is the illative plural of työ (work), used to mean to work / to the workplace (movement toward):

  • lähden töihin = I leave for work

Common contrasts:

  • töihin (illative, motion to) = to work
  • töissä (inessive, being at) = at work
  • töistä (elative, motion from) = from work

työhön is illative singular and can be used in some contexts, but töihin is the idiomatic everyday choice for “to work.”


Why does työ become töihin (what’s happening to the word)?

Several things happen at once:

1) Plural: työtyö-t (plural base)
2) Vowel change (i → i + vowel harmony effects): plural stem becomes töi-
3) Illative ending for plurals: -hin attaches: töi + hintöihin

Also note the vowel ö stays because of Finnish vowel harmony (front vowels).


Can the word order change? For example, Aamulla tarkistan kalenterin…

Yes. Finnish word order is flexible and often used to control emphasis and information flow.

  • Tarkistan kalenterin aamulla… is neutral: action first, then time.
  • Aamulla tarkistan kalenterin… emphasizes in the morning (that time is the key point).
  • Kalenterin tarkistan aamulla… emphasizes the calendar (as opposed to something else).

The core grammar stays the same.


Do I need a subject pronoun minä here?

No. The verb ending already shows the person: tarkista-n, lähde-n = I. So it’s natural to omit minä.

You might add minä for contrast or emphasis:

  • Minä tarkistan kalenterin… = I check (not someone else)

Why is it töihin without a preposition like “to”?

Finnish generally uses cases instead of prepositions for many “to/in/from” meanings. The “to” meaning here is expressed by the illative case (-in/-hin/-Vn depending on the word):

  • töihin = to work
  • kotiin = to home
  • kauppaan = to the store

How is this sentence pronounced (especially double vowels and ä/ö)?

Key points:

  • Tarkistan: stress on the first syllable: TAR-ki-stan
  • kalenterin: ka-len-te-rin (clear short vowels)
  • aamulla: aa is a long vowel (held longer): AA-mul-la
  • ennen kuin: EN-nen ku-in (two syllables in kuin)
  • lähden: has ä like the vowel in cat but more fronted; LÄH-den
  • töihin: ö is like German ö / French eu; TÖI-hin (the öi diphthong is one smooth glide)

Finnish rhythm is very consistent: primary stress almost always on the first syllable of each word.