I never realized until just now that any Finnish syllabel containing -uo- is considered one syllable, but in English people would think this is two syllables.
English: Su-o-ma-lai-nen
Finnish: Suo-ma-lai-nen
Are there any other syllables that are different in Finnish than from English?
-uo- is one syllable ??
Do you mean diphthongs? Here's a list and some pretty graphics..
http://www.helsinki.fi/hum/hyfl/Finnish ... ongit.html
--fry
http://www.helsinki.fi/hum/hyfl/Finnish ... ongit.html
--fry

Fry, you always got the best online Finnish resources.Frypan wrote:Do you mean diphthongs? Here's a list and some pretty graphics..
http://www.helsinki.fi/hum/hyfl/Finnish ... ongit.html
--fry

Are all dipthongs one syllable?? Like is "ie" in tie considered just one syllable?
I think that's the sum of it, but I wouldn't get caught up too much on what is or is not a 'syllable'. Technically a syllable can be more than a single diphthong.
Language and linguistics comes down to what and how people say things, and theoretical notions don't necessarily help. Just use your ears carefully, and say what they say.
Language and linguistics comes down to what and how people say things, and theoretical notions don't necessarily help. Just use your ears carefully, and say what they say.


See the syllables in the Finnish word "kuningatar"! :
http://www.lingsoft.fi/cgi-bin/finhyp?word=kuningatar
Am I the only person who knows about these language tools?
IMPORTANT : FINHYP is for hyphenation, not syllabification! I was wrong!
Thanks Frypan!
http://www.lingsoft.fi/cgi-bin/finhyp?word=kuningatar
Am I the only person who knows about these language tools?
IMPORTANT : FINHYP is for hyphenation, not syllabification! I was wrong!
Thanks Frypan!
Last edited by kalmisto on Thu Nov 04, 2004 8:25 pm, edited 2 times in total.