A1

Local Cases (Outer) in Finnish

Ulkopaikallissijat

Overview

The outer local cases in Finnish — adessive, ablative, and allative — complement the inner local cases by describing being on or at a surface, coming from a surface, and going onto or to a surface. At the A1 level, learning these cases alongside the inner cases gives you the complete toolkit for expressing location and movement in Finnish.

While the inner cases suggest containment (being inside something), the outer cases suggest contact with a surface or proximity to a place. However, their use extends far beyond literal surfaces — the outer cases are also used for certain cities, islands, abstract expressions like "I have" (adessive), and many fixed phrases.

The distinction between inner and outer cases for specific places is mostly a matter of convention that you will internalize over time. The grammatical patterns themselves are straightforward.

How It Works

The three outer local cases

Case Ending Meaning Question word
Adessive -lla / -llä on, at (surface/proximity) missä? (where at?)
Ablative -lta / -ltä from (a surface/proximity) mistä? (where from?)
Allative -lle to, onto (a surface/toward) mihin? / minne? (where to?)

Vowel harmony determines the choice between -lla/-llä and -lta/-ltä. The allative -lle is the same for both.

Adessive (-lla/-llä): "on, at"

Nominative Adessive English
pöytä pöydällä on the table
lattia lattialla on the floor
tori torilla at the market square
kadut kadulla on the street
Tampere Tampereella in Tampere

Ablative (-lta/-ltä): "from (surface)"

Nominative Ablative English
pöytä pöydältä from the table
lattia lattialta from the floor
tori torilta from the market square
Tampere Tampereelta from Tampere

Allative (-lle): "to, onto"

Nominative Allative English
pöytä pöydälle onto the table
lattia lattialle onto the floor
tori torille to the market square
Tampere Tampereelle to Tampere

When to use outer vs. inner cases

Outer cases (surfaces/open) Inner cases (containment)
pöydällä (on the table) laatikossa (in the box)
kadulla (on the street) talossa (in the house)
torilla (at the market) kaupassa (in the store)
Tampereella (in Tampere) Helsingissä (in Helsinki)
pihalla (in the yard) huoneessa (in the room)

Special uses of outer cases

The adessive is also used for:

Use Example English
Possession Minulla on auto. I have a car.
Instrument/means Kirjoitan kynällä. I write with a pen.
Time expressions viikolla (during the week) during the week

Examples in Context

Finnish English Note
Kirja on pöydällä. The book is on the table. Adessive: surface
Otan lasin pöydältä. I take the glass from the table. Ablative: from surface
Laitan kirjan pöydälle. I put the book on the table. Allative: onto surface
Lapset leikkivät pihalla. The children play in the yard. Adessive: open area
Torilla on paljon ihmisiä. There are many people at the market. Adessive: open space
Tulen torilta. I come from the market. Ablative
Menen torille. I go to the market. Allative
Kirjoitan tietokoneella. I write on/with a computer. Adessive: instrument
Soitan sinulle huomenna. I call you tomorrow. Allative: recipient
Asun Tampereella. I live in Tampere. Adessive: city (convention)
Lähden Tampereelta aamulla. I leave Tampere in the morning. Ablative: city
Matkustan Tampereelle. I travel to Tampere. Allative: city

Common Mistakes

Using inner cases for "on" surfaces

  • Wrong: Kirja on pöydässä. (inside the table?)
  • Right: Kirja on pöydällä.
  • Why: Flat surfaces use outer cases. Inner cases imply containment. A book is on a table, not in it.

Confusing which cities use outer cases

  • Wrong: Asun Tampereessa.
  • Right: Asun Tampereella.
  • Why: Certain Finnish cities traditionally use outer cases (Tampere, Rovaniemi). This is a convention you need to memorize for each city.

Forgetting the instrumental adessive

  • Wrong: Kirjoitan kynä. (nominative)
  • Right: Kirjoitan kynällä.
  • Why: When expressing the tool or means of doing something, Finnish uses the adessive case, not the nominative.

Wrong allative usage with people

  • Wrong: Annan kirjan sinussa.
  • Right: Annan kirjan sinulle.
  • Why: When giving something to someone, use the allative (-lle). This is one of the most common uses of the allative beyond physical location.

Practice Tips

  1. Surface vs. container sorting: Look around your room and categorize items by whether they are ON something (adessive) or IN something (inessive). Practice: Kirja on pöydällä, avaimet ovat laukussa.
  2. Three-direction drill: For every surface noun, practice all three outer cases: pöydällä, pöydältä, pöydälle. Do this alongside the inner case drill for complete coverage.
  3. City case memorization: Make a list of Finnish cities and note whether they use inner or outer cases. Most use inner cases; memorize the exceptions that use outer cases.

Related Concepts

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Local Cases (Inner)A1

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