Voisitteko Te mittauttaa verenpaineen samalla, kun haette lääkettä apteekista?

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Questions & Answers about Voisitteko Te mittauttaa verenpaineen samalla, kun haette lääkettä apteekista?

What form is voisitteko?

Voisitteko is made of three parts:

  • voi- = the verb stem of voida (can / to be able to)
  • -isitte = 2nd person plural conditional (you would / could)
  • -ko = a question particle

So voisitteko literally means something like could you?

In this sentence it is a polite way to make a request, similar to English Could you... ?


What does the ending -ko do in voisitteko?

The ending -ko / -kö turns a clause into a yes/no question.

For example:

  • Voisitte = you could
  • Voisitteko? = could you?

It is extremely common in Finnish. English uses word order to form questions, but Finnish often adds -ko/-kö to the key word instead.


Why does the sentence use Te instead of sinä?

Te is the polite/formal you in Finnish. Grammatically it is the 2nd person plural form, but it can be used to address one person politely, especially in customer service, official settings, and older or more formal language.

So here:

  • Te haette = polite you pick up / collect
  • not necessarily plural you all collect

A less formal version might use sinä and singular verb forms:

  • Voisitko sinä mittauttaa verenpaineen samalla, kun haet lääkettä apteekista?

Why is Te capitalized?

Capitalizing Te is a traditional way to show extra politeness in writing.

So:

  • te = normal plural you, or less marked polite you
  • Te = especially polite written form

You will see both in real Finnish. Capital Te is more formal and somewhat old-fashioned, but still understandable and used in certain contexts.


Why does the sentence say voisitteko Te instead of just giving a command?

Because Finnish often uses a question in the conditional to sound polite.

Compare:

  • Mittauttakaa verenpaine. = Have your blood pressure measured.
    This sounds more direct, like an instruction.
  • Voisitteko Te mittauttaa verenpaineen...? = Could you have your blood pressure measured...?
    This sounds softer and more polite.

So the sentence is phrased as a polite suggestion/request rather than a blunt command.


What does mittauttaa mean, and how is it different from mitata?

Mitata means to measure.

Mittauttaa is a causative verb. It means to have something measured or to get something measured, meaning that someone else does the measuring for you.

So:

  • mitata verenpaine = to measure blood pressure
  • mittauttaa verenpaine = to have one’s blood pressure measured

This is a very natural verb here, because at a pharmacy or clinic, another person usually measures it.


Why is it verenpaineen and not verenpaine?

Verenpaineen is the object form used here. With many verbs, Finnish marks the object differently depending on whether the action is seen as complete/whole or incomplete/partial.

Here the idea is to have the blood pressure measured as a complete action, so the object is in the total object form:

  • verenpaine = dictionary form
  • verenpaineen = object form here

This is one of those areas where English speakers often need time to get used to Finnish object marking.


Why is it lääkettä and not lääkkeen?

Lääkettä is partitive singular.

With the verb hakea (to fetch / pick up / get), the object is often in the partitive when the item is indefinite, unspecified, or presented more generally.

So haette lääkettä apteekista feels like:

  • when you are picking up medicine from the pharmacy
  • not necessarily that one specific medicine as a fully bounded object

If the speaker had a specific medicine in mind, lääkkeen could also be possible in another context. But lääkettä is very natural here in general service-language Finnish.


What does samalla, kun mean?

Samalla, kun means while / at the same time as / when you’re already...

In this sentence it suggests combining two errands:

  • mittauttaa verenpaineen samalla, kun haette lääkettä apteekista
  • have your blood pressure measured while you are picking up medicine at the pharmacy

It often has the sense of while you’re at it or at the same time.


Why is the verb haette in plural form?

Because it matches Te.

Finnish polite Te takes plural verb agreement, even when speaking to just one person:

  • Te haette
  • Te voisitte

So although the sentence may be addressed to one customer, the grammar is plural because polite you uses plural forms.


Why is it apteekista?

Apteekista is the elative form of apteekki (pharmacy), with the ending -sta / -stä, which often means out of / from.

So:

  • apteekki = pharmacy
  • apteekista = from the pharmacy

This fits the verb hakea, because you pick something up from a place.


Is the comma before kun necessary?

Yes, in standard Finnish, a comma is normally used before a subordinate clause introduced by kun.

So:

  • samalla, kun haette lääkettä apteekista

The comma helps show that kun haette lääkettä apteekista is a subordinate clause.


Could the word order be different?

Yes. Finnish word order is fairly flexible, and changing it can shift emphasis.

For example, a similar sentence could be:

  • Voisitteko Te samalla mittauttaa verenpaineen, kun haette lääkettä apteekista?

That is still understandable, but the original sentence sounds natural and balanced. The version given places the main request first and then adds the while you’re at it part.

So in Finnish, word order is not as rigid as in English, but not every possible order sounds equally natural.


Is this sentence old-fashioned or still usable in modern Finnish?

It is understandable and grammatically fine, but it sounds fairly formal and polite, especially because of Te and the capitalization.

In modern everyday speech, many speakers would use a less formal version, for example with sinä forms. But in customer service, healthcare, or formal written communication, this style is still quite plausible.

So the sentence is not wrong or strange—it just belongs to a more formal register.


What is the basic structure of the whole sentence?

The sentence breaks down like this:

  • Voisitteko Te = Could you (polite)
  • mittauttaa verenpaineen = have your blood pressure measured
  • samalla = at the same time / while you’re at it
  • kun haette lääkettä apteekista = when/while you pick up medicine from the pharmacy

So the grammar is basically:

polite question + infinitive action + time/simultaneous clause

That pattern is very common in Finnish polite requests.