B1

Conditional Mood in Finnish

Konditionaali

Overview

The conditional mood (konditionaali) is one of the most useful grammatical tools you will learn at the B1 level. It is formed with the marker -isi- inserted between the verb stem and the personal ending. The conditional is used to express hypothetical situations, wishes, polite requests, and conditions — similar to English "would" constructions ("I would go," "would you like?").

Finnish speakers use the conditional extensively in everyday conversation, particularly for politeness. Instead of saying Haluan kahvia (I want coffee), it is much more natural and polite to say Haluaisin kahvia (I would like coffee). The conditional softens statements and requests, making it essential for social interaction.

The conditional also plays a central role in conditional sentences (if-then constructions), which are covered as a separate topic. Mastering the conditional mood opens up a wide range of expression that goes well beyond what the present and past tenses alone can convey.

How It Works

Formation

Verb stem + isi + personal ending

Person puhua (to speak) syödä (to eat) tulla (to come)
minä puhuisin isin tulisin
sinä puhuisit isit tulisit
hän puhuisi isi tulisi
me puhuisimme isimme tulisimme
te puhuisitte isitte tulisitte
he puhuisivat isivät tulisivat

Negation

ei (conjugated) + verb stem + isi

Person Negative conditional
minä en puhuisi
sinä et puhuisi
hän ei puhuisi
me emme puhuisi
te ette puhuisi
he eivät puhuisi

Key uses

Use Example English
Polite request Haluaisin kahvia. I would like coffee.
Hypothetical Matkustaisin Suomeen. I would travel to Finland.
Wish Toivoisin, että aurinko paistaisi. I wish the sun would shine.
Suggestion Voisimme mennä ulos. We could go outside.
Conditional clause Jos minulla olisi rahaa, ostaisin talon. If I had money, I would buy a house.
Softened opinion Sanoisin, että se on hyvä idea. I would say it's a good idea.

Conditional of "olla" (to be)

Person Conditional
minä olisin
sinä olisit
hän olisi
me olisimme
te olisitte
he olisivat

Examples in Context

Finnish English Note
Haluaisin kahvia, kiitos. I would like coffee, please. Polite request
Voisitko auttaa minua? Could you help me? Polite question
Jos olisin rikas, matkustaisin paljon. If I were rich, I would travel a lot. Hypothetical condition
Menisimmekö elokuviin? Shall we go to the movies? Suggestion
Hän sanoisi, ettei tiedä. He/She would say he/she doesn't know. Hypothetical speech
En tekisi niin. I wouldn't do that. Negative conditional
Olisi mukava nähdä sinua. It would be nice to see you. Wish
Pitäisikö meidän lähteä? Should we leave? Suggestion/question
Söisinkö pizzaa vai pastaa? Should I eat pizza or pasta? Deliberation
Tämä olisi hyvä paikka. This would be a good place. Hypothetical evaluation
Antaisitko sen minulle? Would you give it to me? Polite request
Jos tietäisin, kertoisin sinulle. If I knew, I would tell you. Conditional sentence

Common Mistakes

Confusing conditional with past tense

  • Wrong: Mixing up puhuin (I spoke, past) with puhuisin (I would speak, conditional)
  • Right: Pay attention to -i- (past) vs. -isi- (conditional)
  • Why: Both use -i- in some form, but the conditional has the full -isi- marker. The past tense marker is just -i-.

Using conditional in both clauses of if-sentences

  • Wrong: Jos haluaisin, ostaisin... is correct, but beginners sometimes miss that the jos-clause uses conditional too
  • Right: In Finnish, both clauses of hypothetical conditions use the conditional
  • Why: Unlike English ("if I had" — past, "I would buy" — conditional), Finnish uses conditional in both parts.

Forgetting to use conditional for politeness

  • Wrong: Haluan kahvia. (direct, can sound blunt)
  • Right: Haluaisin kahvia. (polite)
  • Why: Finnish etiquette expects the conditional for requests in shops, restaurants, and formal settings.

Applying conditional to wrong verb stem

  • Wrong: syödisin (adding -isi- to the infinitive)
  • Right: söisin (adding -isi- to the correct stem)
  • Why: The conditional uses the same verb stem as the past tense, not the infinitive form.

Usage Notes

The conditional mood is one of the hallmarks of polite Finnish. In everyday interactions — ordering food, making requests, suggesting plans — the conditional is strongly preferred over the indicative. Using the indicative for requests (Haluan...) is not grammatically wrong but can sound demanding. At the B1 level, you should aim to use the conditional automatically in these social contexts.

In spoken Finnish, the conditional endings are often shortened: mä puhuisinmä puhuis, me mentäis (instead of menisimme). The spoken 1st person plural conditional commonly uses the passive form: me mentäis instead of menisimme.

Practice Tips

  1. Polite ordering: Practice ordering food and drinks using conditional: Haluaisin..., Voisinko saada..., Ottaisin... This is immediately practical for real-life situations.
  2. Dream scenarios: Describe what you would do in hypothetical situations: Jos voisin matkustaa minne tahansa, menisin... Jos olisin presidentti, tekisin...
  3. Suggestion practice: Make suggestions using conditional: Voisimmeko mennä...? Pitäisikö meidän...? Olisiko hyvä idea...?

Related Concepts

선행 개념

Present TenseA1

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