Basic Finnish for tourists and travelers: Difference between revisions
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Just talk English as "everyone" talks English here but feel free to use 'kiitos' and everyone will be impressed how well versed you are in Finnish as a foreigner. | Just talk English as "everyone" talks English here but feel free to use 'kiitos' and everyone will be impressed how well versed you are in Finnish as a foreigner. | ||
''' | '''Get public transport''' | ||
Use '''[https://www.hsl.fi/en/tickets-and-fares Ticket types and fares of the Metropolitan Helsinki area (in English)]''' to figure out the best choice of public transport ticket for yourself. Available types are | Use '''[https://www.hsl.fi/en/tickets-and-fares Ticket types and fares of the Metropolitan Helsinki area (in English)]''' to figure out the best choice of public transport ticket for yourself. Available types are | ||
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At an R-kioski you can purchase single tickets, or much better: Get a (multi)day public transport pass ('''matkakortti''') for the public transport system as the single tickets are expensive and inconvenient for the traveler as they are valid for only 69 minutes (Helsinki internal) and 80 minutes (Helsinki-region). | At an R-kioski you can purchase single tickets, or much better: Get a (multi)day public transport pass ('''matkakortti''') for the public transport system as the single tickets are expensive and inconvenient for the traveler as they are valid for only 69 minutes (Helsinki internal) and 80 minutes (Helsinki-region). | ||
Download the '''[https://www.hsl.fi/en/app HSL App]''' (HSL == Helsinki Region Transport Authority) for [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=fi.hsl.app Android] or [https://itunes.apple.com/fi/app/apple-store/id1340229182 iOS]. Within the app you can access the in-house '''traveler router''' and also '''purchase tickets''', once you have registered your credit card in the app. For people with Finnish postpaid sims also payment in the phone bill is possible. | Download the '''[https://www.hsl.fi/en/app HSL App]''' (HSL == Helsinki Region Transport Authority) for [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=fi.hsl.app Android] or [https://itunes.apple.com/fi/app/apple-store/id1340229182 iOS]. Within the app you can access the in-house '''traveler router''' and also '''purchase tickets''', once you have registered your credit card in the app. For people with Finnish postpaid sims also payment in the phone bill is possible. | ||
If you have an Android phone with NFC you could also find the '''[https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bonwal.omamatkakortti Oma Matkakortti App]''' (Own travel pass) useful as it allows you to check the status of your travel pass with your phone. | |||
Lets get your luggage to the hotel and you to enjoy the Finland. | Lets get your luggage to the hotel and you to enjoy the Finland. |
Revision as of 13:46, 22 March 2019
Tervetuloa, Welcome to Basic Finnish for tourists and travelers and kiitos for taking on elementary traveler Finnish.
- fi."terve" == en."healthy"
- fi."tuloa" == en."of coming"
- -> fi."Tervetuloa" == en."of healthy coming, to welcome"
The way to thank people in Finnish is "Kiitos" which literally translates to "a thank" (plural is 'kiitoksia' and is a slightly more thanking expression). This is the most common way to thank a person in Finnish.
Vast majority of Finns will switch to English if they encounter foreigners trying to apply less than perfect Finnish. This does not mean they do not appreciate the effort to try to learn some command of Finnish and to apply it but Finns just figure out the foreigners will not bother to learn the language spoken only by some 5 mln people. Assumption of English being the highest in common language is due to desire to be hospitable towards the non-native.
Knowing the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) helps greatly in this task as nearly all Finnish letters are pronounced as they are written and the IPA equivalent reads pretty much the same.
At the airport / port / terminal
Get communications
If you have a postpaid sim card from an EU country then roaming is not prohibitively expensive or even included in your package, but if you don't have a postpaid sim from EU then while you are at the airport, port or train station we could interest you in purchasing a prepaid sim card (prepaid simkortti) from R-kioski. These are really inexpensive with 24 hr unlimited 4G, unlimited calls and SMS going for under 1€ / day.
Just talk English as "everyone" talks English here but feel free to use 'kiitos' and everyone will be impressed how well versed you are in Finnish as a foreigner.
Get public transport
Use Ticket types and fares of the Metropolitan Helsinki area (in English) to figure out the best choice of public transport ticket for yourself. Available types are
- single ticket
- day and multi-day passes (1-7 days) and
- long duration pass (14-365 or more days).
The longer period you purchase the lower the per time unit price gets.
At an R-kioski you can purchase single tickets, or much better: Get a (multi)day public transport pass (matkakortti) for the public transport system as the single tickets are expensive and inconvenient for the traveler as they are valid for only 69 minutes (Helsinki internal) and 80 minutes (Helsinki-region).
Download the HSL App (HSL == Helsinki Region Transport Authority) for Android or iOS. Within the app you can access the in-house traveler router and also purchase tickets, once you have registered your credit card in the app. For people with Finnish postpaid sims also payment in the phone bill is possible.
If you have an Android phone with NFC you could also find the Oma Matkakortti App (Own travel pass) useful as it allows you to check the status of your travel pass with your phone.
Lets get your luggage to the hotel and you to enjoy the Finland.
- Helsinki-region traveler router will whisk you where you need to go.
Ride-hailing apps
Operating in the Helsinki region are at least the following ride-hailing services: Uber, Bolt and Yango (Yandex.Taxi).
Taxis
Finland used to have a unified pricing system for taxis, but this was reformed in 2018 and that has lead to widely varying prices as the companies have different price setting models. A good thing that the reformation brought is that how you can ask for the price for your trip in advance.
Choosing a sauna
- fi."allas" == en."pool"
- fi."teltta" == en."tent"
- fi."löyly" == en."steam, quality of sauna experience"
Some famous saunas in Helsinki are:
- Allas Seapool by the central market square with saunas, warm swimming pool (which floats in the sea) and the sea pool itself. Single ticket 12€, discounts for kids etc.
- Arlan Sauna oldschool sauna since 1929. Kaarlenkatu 15. Single ticket 12€.
- Helsinki Swimming Stadium is an outdoor swimming stadium with milder and hotter saunas is an inexpensive and authentic way to experience sauna. Hammarskjöldintie 5. Single ticket 4€.
- Kotiharjun Sauna is the original wood heated public sauna in town. Open Tue-Sun 14:00-20:00 with bathing till 21:30. Harjutorinkatu 1. Single ticket 13€.
- Lapinlahden telttasauna by the sea in the scenic Lapinlahti grounds open Fri and Sat 15-20 is renowned for their trademark smooth and mellow löyly administered by the 'Sauna Major'.
- Löyly is a recently built designer sauna with sun decks and a restaurant in Hernesaari. This sauna is by the sea. Hernesaarenranta 4. A 2 hr sauna session is 19€ includes a towel, seat cover as well as soap and shampoo.
- Sauna Hermanni is a traditional sauna in the Hermanni district. Hämeentie 63. Single ticket 10€
- Sompasauna is free of charge but bringing löyly water (normal tap water) and firewood (available at gas stations) will be appreciated at this community-built and community-run sauna. This classic sauna is by the sea.
- More alternatives from the Helsinki City tourist site
Helsinki Sauna Day is an event held on Saturdays annually or biannually. The plot is this: Saunas are heated and opened up to sauna-goers free-of-charge. This is an excellent way to discover quality saunas inaccessible normally. On the website you may either register your sauna to participate or to book seats in sauna waves (usually 1hr long slots). Not limited only to Helsinki. Next Helsinki Sauna Day is 2018-03-10 (Sat March 10 2018).
To the sauna
You want to experience the wonderfully indescribable soothing effect of the Finnish sauna. Excellent choice dear Sir/Madam.
Depending on your choice of sauna, i.e. municipal swimming hall, country-side cabin sauna, old-school commercial sauna a few exist, hotel or restaurant's sauna or one of the new design saunas that have recently sprung up the rules are slightly different but lingo is unchanged throughout Finnish sauna culture.
Getting to the sauna
- fi."Missä?" is equivalent to the English expression en."Where?"
- fi."on" is the verb 'to be' for 3rd person singular in present tense and the plural is ovat
- fi."puku" == en."dressing, suit, costume"
- fi."huone" == en."room"
- fi."kalja" plural "kaljat" == en."beer" (slang) officially the word is olut but people call it kalja
Now we are ready to form some useful sentences
- fi."Missä on sauna?" == en."Where is the sauna?"
- fi."Missä on pukuhuone?" == en."Where is the dressing room?"
- fi."Missä ovat kaljat?" == en."Where are the beers?"
- Now we can also form the compound word fi."pukuhuonekaljat" == en."dressing room beers", awesome!
- fi."Tarvitsen" == en."[I] need"
- '-ko' or '-kö'-suffix always forms a question but is not the only way to do so.
- fi."pyyhkeen == en."a towel"
- fi."shampoo == en."shampoo"
- fi."uima == en."of swimming"
- fi."housut == en."pants"
- fi."uimahousut" == en."swimming trunks"
- fi."uimapuvun" == en."a swimsuit"
Lets apply with what we know so far:
- "Tarvitsenko pyyhkeen?" == en."Do I need a towel?"
- "Onko kaljaa?" == en."Are there any beers?"
In the locker room
In private properties' saunas there are no lockers but many, except the most ad-hoc saunas, offer a lockable locker. Key is attached to a rubber ring (at the swimming hall) that is to be worn around the ankle.
This is usually the start of nudity area but sometimes people may go to the shower room with swim wear on and only there remove it to go to shower, sauna, shower, put swim wear on and hit the pool.
- fi."päin" == en."the direction of"
- "Missä päin sauna on?" == en."In which direction the sauna is?". Follow the wave hand signal direction.
Shower room / bathing area
- In hotel and restaurant saunas toiletries will be provided by the establishment for the traveler. In private saunas these are also on the house. In other cases bring your own.
In the sauna
- fi."Vihdo" == en."[you] whack with vihta"
- fi."lujempaa" == en."harder"
- -> fi."Vihdo lujempaa" == en."Whack me harder with your vihta."
- fi."lisää" == en."more [of x]"
- fi."heitä" == en."[you] throw"
- fi."löyly", plural löylyt could be translated to "steam" but in fact löyly is a far wider concept i.e. it is not only about the heat and humidity percent. Löyly can also be used to refer to the quality of the löyly in a certain sauna.
- The suffix '-ä' or '-a' (determined if there are umlauted characters present in the word body or not) forms the partitive case.
Lets put that all together, you want more löyly you ask for:
- -> fi."Lisää löylyä." == en."Throw some more water on the stones."
- -> fi."Heitä löylyä" == same thing
- fi."hyvä" plural "hyvät" == en."good"
- fi."Hyvät löylyt" == en."Good steams"
- fi."Helvetti" == en."Hell"
- fi."liian" == en."too much"
- fi."kuuma" == en."hot"
- -> fi."Helvetti, liian kuuma" == en."Hell, it is too hot in here."
Getting out of the sauna
- fi."mennään" == en."lets go"
- fi."uimaan" == en."to swimming"
- -> fi."Mennään uimaan" == en."Lets go swimming"
- fi.'-lle'-suffix == en."for someone/something, to somewhere, to somebody's place"
- -> fi."Mennään kaljalle." == en."Lets go have a beer."
Then we go for the more extreme sauna cool down
- fi."Hypätään" == en."lets jump"
- fi."avanto" == en."ice hole"
- fi.'-on' / '-ön'-suffix == en."to inside"
- -> fi."Hypätään avantoon" == en."Lets jump into the ice hole."
- fi."kieritään" == en."lets roll"
- fi."lumi" == en."snow"
- fi.'-ssa' / '-ssä'-suffix == en."in something"
- -> fi."Kieritään lumessa!" == en."Lets roll in the snow!"
After the sauna
- fi."lonkero" == lit. "tentacle" but means a classic drink made of gin and fizzy grapefruit soda sold in bottles ever since the 1952 Helsinki Olympics. An alternative after sauna drink.
- fi."grillataan" == en."lets bbq"
- fi."lähdetään" == en."lets go"
- fi."ravintolaan" == en."to a restaurant"
Special times in the sauna calendar
- Sauna Day is a day when the saunas are heated and opened up to the public free of charge. Website has possibility to enroll a sauna or book a sauna slot.
June
July
- Rantasauna Day (not loading as of 2019-03-22) in the Mikkeli area
December
- Joulusauna on the Xmas eve afternoon is a family classic
Biannually
- Helsinki Sauna Day annual-to-biannual free sauna day in Helsinki and also elsewhere.