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English

Pronunciation

Wikipedia has an article on: Finnish

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Adjective

Finnish (comparative more Finnish, superlative most Finnish)

Positive Finnish

Comparative more Finnish

Superlative most Finnish

  1. Of or pertaining to Finland.
  2. Of or pertaining to the Finnish language.

Proper noun

Singular Finnish

Plural -

Finnish

  1. The Finno-Ugric language spoken by the majority of the people living in Finland, one of the two official languages of the country (the other is Swedish).

Translations

Finnish (language)

See also

External links

 

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A sneak look at Nokia's Symbian update - Techworld.com
news.google.com
A sneak look at Nokia's Symbian update

Techworld.com

The Finnish mobile phone manufacturer, the largest in the world by volume, has seen rumors of dropping Symbian in favor of Google's own Android operating ...



and more »
Google News Search: Finnish,
Tue Dec 8 05:10:35 2009
finnish 9882 lr jpg
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finnish 9882 lr jpg
399px x 600px | 55.70kB

[source page]

finnish 9882 lr jpg

Yahoo Images Search: Finnish,
Thu Dec 10 09:38:31 2009
BLABBERMOUTH.NET - NIGHTWISH Singer Performs With THE RASMUS On ...
roadrunnerrecords.com
BLABBERMOUTH.NET - NIGHTWISH Singer Performs With THE RASMUS On ...

unknown

Sat, 28 Nov 2009 15:45:24 GM

Nightwish frontwoman Anette Olzon joined the . Finnish. rock band the rasmus this week on the . Finnish. TV show "Ne Salmiset" to perform the rasmus' new single, "October & April". The performance was broadcast earlier today (Saturday, ...

Google Blogs Search: Finnish,
Wed Dec 9 15:51:17 2009
What's the difference between the Finnish words heippa and moikka?
Q. I know they both mean bye, but is one more formal or casual?
Asked by Annika - Sat Jul 25 22:25:43 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Heippa is more friendly and moikka is not, but it's not because it's a formal word or something aah and moikka can also mean hi (:
Answered by kukkii - Sat Jul 25 22:39:42 2009

Yahoo Answers Search: Finnish,
Tue Dec 15 00:36:18 2009