Participles in Finnish
Partisiipit
Overview
Participles are verb forms that function as adjectives or are used in various complex constructions. Finnish has a rich participle system with four main types, making it one of the most distinctive features of the language at the B2 level. The participles allow you to compress entire subordinate clauses into compact modifiers, a technique that is essential in written Finnish.
The four main participles are: the present active (-va/-vä), the past active (-nut/-nyt), the present passive (-tava/-tävä), and the past passive (-tu/-ty). Each has specific functions and appears in different grammatical contexts. The past active participle (-nut/-nyt) is already familiar to you from the perfect tense — here you will learn its adjectival and other uses.
Participles are more common in written Finnish than in spoken language, where relative clauses are generally preferred. However, understanding participles is essential for reading newspapers, academic texts, and formal documents.
How It Works
The four participles
| Type | Suffix | Example (puhua) | English equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Present active | -va/-vä | puhuva | speaking / who speaks |
| Past active | -nut/-nyt | puhunut | (having) spoken |
| Present passive | -tava/-tävä | puhuttava | to be spoken / that should be spoken |
| Past passive | -tu/-ty | puhuttu | spoken / that was spoken |
Present active participle (-va/-vä)
Describes someone/something performing an action right now or habitually:
| Verb | Participle | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| puhua | puhuva | suomea puhuva mies | a man who speaks Finnish |
| lukea | lukeva | lukeva lapsi | a child who reads |
| juosta | juokseva | juokseva vesi | running water |
This participle declines like adjectives:
- puhuvan miehen (genitive), puhuvaa miestä (partitive), puhuvassa talossa...
Past active participle (-nut/-nyt)
Describes someone who has done something:
| Verb | Participle | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| puhua | puhunut | paljon puhunut nainen | a woman who has spoken a lot |
| tulla | tullut | juuri tullut vieras | a just-arrived guest |
| syödä | syönyt | hyvin syönyt lapsi | a well-fed child |
Present passive participle (-tava/-tävä)
Expresses obligation ("must be done") or possibility ("that can be done"):
| Verb | Participle | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| lukea | luettava | luettava kirja | a book to be read / a readable book |
| tehdä | tehtävä | tehtävä työ | work that must be done |
| hyväksyä | hyväksyttävä | hyväksyttävä ratkaisu | an acceptable solution |
Past passive participle (-tu/-ty)
Describes something that has been done to the subject:
| Verb | Participle | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| puhua | puhuttu | paljon puhuttu aihe | a much-discussed topic |
| rakentaa | rakennettu | uudelleen rakennettu talo | a rebuilt house |
| unohda | unohdettu | unohdettu kaupunki | a forgotten city |
Participial constructions replacing relative clauses
| Relative clause | Participle construction |
|---|---|
| Mies, joka puhuu suomea | Suomea puhuva mies |
| Kirja, joka on luettu | Luettu kirja |
| Työ, joka pitää tehdä | Tehtävä työ |
Examples in Context
| Finnish | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Suomea puhuva turisti kysyi tietä. | A Finnish-speaking tourist asked for directions. | Present active |
| Juuri saapunut paketti on pöydällä. | The just-arrived package is on the table. | Past active |
| Tämä on luettava kirja. | This is a book that must be read. | Present passive |
| Puhuttu kieli eroaa kirjoitetusta. | Spoken language differs from written. | Past passive |
| Itkevälle lapselle annettiin karkkia. | The crying child was given candy. | Present active, declining |
| Syöty kakku oli herkullinen. | The eaten cake was delicious. | Past passive |
| Nähdäkseni tämä on tehtävissä. | In my view, this is doable. | Present passive + inessive |
| Hyvin tunnettu kirjailija asuu täällä. | A well-known author lives here. | Past passive |
| Tänne tulevat bussit ovat sinisiä. | The buses coming here are blue. | Present active, plural |
| Unohdetut tavarat voi noutaa toimistosta. | Forgotten items can be collected from the office. | Past passive |
Common Mistakes
Using a relative clause when a participle is more natural (in writing)
- Wrong: Mies, joka puhuu suomea, on täällä. (in formal writing)
- Right: Suomea puhuva mies on täällä.
- Why: In written Finnish, participial constructions are preferred for their conciseness. In speech, relative clauses are fine.
Forgetting to decline participles
- Wrong: Suomea puhuva miehelle annettiin palkinto.
- Right: Suomea puhuvalle miehelle annettiin palkinto.
- Why: Participles function as adjectives and must agree in case and number with the noun they modify.
Confusing active and passive participles
- Wrong: puhuttu mies (a "spoken man"?) when meaning "a man who spoke"
- Right: puhunut mies (a man who spoke) vs. puhuttu kieli (a spoken language)
- Why: Active participles describe the doer; passive participles describe what was done to something.
Usage Notes
Participles are a hallmark of literary and formal Finnish. Newspapers, academic papers, and official documents use participial constructions extensively to create concise, information-dense sentences. In spoken Finnish, these are typically expanded into full relative clauses. As a B2 learner, you should be able to understand participial constructions in reading and begin using them in your own writing.
The present passive participle (-tava/-tävä) has a special use in expressing obligation or necessity: Tämä on tehtävä heti (This must be done immediately). This overlaps with other necessity expressions but is very common in written Finnish.
Practice Tips
- Relative clause compression: Take sentences with relative clauses and rewrite them using participles: Nainen, joka laulaa → laulava nainen. Kirja, joka on luettu → luettu kirja.
- News reading: Read Finnish news articles and identify participial constructions. Note which type of participle is used and what it replaces.
- Four-form practice: For each verb, create all four participle forms: puhuva, puhunut, puhuttava, puhuttu. Then use each in a phrase.
Related Concepts
- Prerequisite: Perfect Tense — the past active participle is already used in perfect tenses
- Next steps: Indirect Speech (Referatiivi) — participles in reported speech
- Next steps: Agent Participle — a special participle identifying the agent
- Next steps: Sequence of Tenses — how participle tenses interact
선행 개념
Perfect TenseA2이 개념을 기반으로 한 개념들
다른 B2 개념들
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