Let me give you a sample....
Mina olen John Smith. Mina Olen Canadeinen. Mini puho Eglandtia oikon huvian, un vahan Soumi. Puhutteko te ah Englandtia?

See that's pretty good ahh??
Finnish. If you live in Kamppi, the default language is 50/50 Finnish/English, but that is the only exception I've noticed in Helsinki myself.niceguy40 wrote:Do locals mainly speak in Finnish or in English, like when they're out in public?
90%. How many will? Maybe 20. The rest will smile awkwardly and just stop talking to you.niceguy40 wrote:And if you say a few words in finnish and then ask to speak in English, how many people will be able to speak to you in English?
No hei anteeks, mulla on kiire. (The likely response unless they're really outgoing or kind.)niceguy40 wrote:Like in reality I know a few words. But I probably could learn the basics in about a year. Just cuz I grew up around it. But at first I won't be able to talk finnish when I get there. So I don't know how well that's gonna go over???
Let me give you a sample....
Mina olen John Smith. Mina Olen Canadeinen. Mini puho Eglandtia oikon huvian, un vahan Soumi. Puhutteko te ah Englandtia?![]()
See that's pretty good ahh??
mina ah kululeisl wrote:Finnish. If you live in Kamppi, the default language is 50/50 Finnish/English, but that is the only exception I've noticed in Helsinki myself.niceguy40 wrote:Do locals mainly speak in Finnish or in English, like when they're out in public?90%. How many will? Maybe 20. The rest will smile awkwardly and just stop talking to you.niceguy40 wrote:And if you say a few words in finnish and then ask to speak in English, how many people will be able to speak to you in English?No hei anteeks, mulla on kiire. (The likely response unless they're really outgoing or kind.)niceguy40 wrote:Like in reality I know a few words. But I probably could learn the basics in about a year. Just cuz I grew up around it. But at first I won't be able to talk finnish when I get there. So I don't know how well that's gonna go over???
Let me give you a sample....
Mina olen John Smith. Mina Olen Canadeinen. Mini puho Eglandtia oikon huvian, un vahan Soumi. Puhutteko te ah Englandtia?![]()
See that's pretty good ahh??
You won't get anywhere near conversation level in a year. Sorry mate. Obviously you can sort of say some words to make yourself understood, but repeating rehearsed lines is a thousand times easier than understanding.
It'll be compounded if you are not in the workforce, not in Finland or not actively using it every day for several hours a day.
Even in shops they rather loose a customer than having a technical conversation in English. (nerds excepted)leisl wrote:90%. How many will? Maybe 20. The rest will smile awkwardly and just stop talking to you.niceguy40 wrote:And if you say a few words in finnish and then ask to speak in English, how many people will be able to speak to you in English?
No they don't.Do locals mainly speak in Finnish or in English, like when they're out in public?
They stare at you.And if you say a few words
I think you miss-spelt "people willing to speak"...how many people will be able to speak to you in English?
Search is blocking me out at the moment but I remember the earlier threads implying that he could get a permit based on ancestry. It follows that a life on benefits would be possible.Piet wrote:You won't get a permit to stay, you do not speak the language, you have only some distant relatives here that probably do not even know you.
betelgeuse wrote:Search is blocking me out at the moment but I remember the earlier threads implying that he could get a permit based on ancestry. It follows that a life on benefits would be possible.Piet wrote:You won't get a permit to stay, you do not speak the language, you have only some distant relatives here that probably do not even know you.
niceguy40 wrote:What I've been told by my parents is that at the time they came to Canada in the late 50's there was no "dual citizenships". So they had to give up there fin citzship. So when I was born in the 70's I'm pretty sure neither had there Fin citz. But I talked to the embassy, they told me that they could get there fin citz reinstated very easy. But they told me that for some reason that would not help me.
So I would qualify for a residency permit? I'll have to look into that.
Any other info you can provide would be helpful. Thank you.
Now you switched to talking about getting citizenship which is irrelevant to residence permits. I was able to access the earlier thread and the information there agrees with my previous post.Piet wrote: As I recall it was something like his parents or one of them was Finnish but became Canadian and lost its Finnish nationality, he was born after that....so neither of his parents had the Finnish nationality when he was born. His mother (I think) could get it back but that would not imply that he would get Finnish nationality because she wasn't Finnish when he was born.
I copied from the same thread, as I understood he would be unable to get a residents permit based on his parents being finnish because these parents were not finnish anymore so his citizenship would be not finnish and he being canadian would not grant him a residence permit based on family ties or ancestry. So his options get severely limited, he does not have a job in Finland, no study so those temporary permits are out of the picture too, what else is left? or am I missing somethingbetelgeuse wrote:Now you switched to talking about getting citizenship which is irrelevant to residence permits. I was able to access the earlier thread and the information there agrees with my previous post.Piet wrote: As I recall it was something like his parents or one of them was Finnish but became Canadian and lost its Finnish nationality, he was born after that....so neither of his parents had the Finnish nationality when he was born. His mother (I think) could get it back but that would not imply that he would get Finnish nationality because she wasn't Finnish when he was born.
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=89356&p=546285#p546285
you have it all figured out ahhPiet wrote:I copied from the same thread, as I understood he would be unable to get a residents permit based on his parents being finnish because these parents were not finnish anymore so his citizenship would be not finnish and he being canadian would not grant him a residence permit based on family ties or ancestry. So his options get severely limited, he does not have a job in Finland, no study so those temporary permits are out of the picture too, what else is left? or am I missing somethingbetelgeuse wrote:Now you switched to talking about getting citizenship which is irrelevant to residence permits. I was able to access the earlier thread and the information there agrees with my previous post.Piet wrote: As I recall it was something like his parents or one of them was Finnish but became Canadian and lost its Finnish nationality, he was born after that....so neither of his parents had the Finnish nationality when he was born. His mother (I think) could get it back but that would not imply that he would get Finnish nationality because she wasn't Finnish when he was born.
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=89356&p=546285#p546285![]()
As discussed in that same thread, but of course I could have misunderstood and or misread![]()
Basically in that thread is already suggested the guy should wake up.