shawn1980ma wrote:if anyone came to the US, and called it umm..... Birdland or something, I would really be shocked.
In Finland for a short visit, it's best to use the words
"yes, no, please, sorry, Finland, Finnish" etc. You may even pronounce wrongly the first names and last names of people, it won't be an offense, it will be at worst a funny thing (like the way Conan O'Brien says "Tar-dja" instead of "Tar-ya", for the first name of the finnish president, Tarja Halonen). And Finns aren't the latin-type of person; if they are offended, they keep quite and even smiling, they won't punch you in the face impulsively or threaten you with a weapon, especially if it's just for a mis-pronounced word. Even if you mispronouce the first name "Vesa" into "vessa" (toilets, loo).
Trying to use Finnish, without knowing much of it, could cause funny misunderstandings, harder to defuse than a consistent use of English:
Tapaan sinut huomenna (I will meet you tomorrow) should not be pronounced like
Tapan sinut huomenna (I will kill you tomorrow). You will also get some weird look, if you say for instance
koti (home) instead of
kiitos (please/thanks), or
antinski (the "ski" of Antti) instead of
anteeksi (pardon me). Not to mention something like "I like your country, Suo is beautiful", because you would have remembered only the first half of the word "Suomi" (Finland), i.e. "suo" (swamp).
/Paul