User:Wipe

For words in other languages than English, the page Entry layout explained is very concise and ambiguous. I recommend to take a look at. 

– Don’t come the old acid with me, Poirot. – Qu’est-ce que c’est “the old acid”, Chief Inspector?

Finnish in the English Wiktionary
If you are knowledgeable in the Finnish language and have free time, please consider creating About Finnish (see Category:Wiktionary language considerations). The lack of any policy holds me (and probably others) back from editing and creating entries. A concentrated effort is needed to advance Finnish related issues in the English Wiktionary.

Finnish Google searches

 * Categorize as Category:Finnish words with multiple etymologies.
 * Translate to Finnish.
 * Add declension.
 * Add hyphenation.
 * Translate to Finnish.
 * Add declension.
 * Add hyphenation.
 * Add hyphenation.
 * Add hyphenation.

Some missing English pages
This is not a to-do list, just some missing English definitions. Feel free to create them or transclude this list elsewhere. I take no responsibility that these are in fact real words or expressions. ;-)

Definitions

 * blister pack
 * bust a cap in someone's ass
 * buttoned-down
 * energy drink
 * hors de combat
 * juures
 * maltodextrin
 * taapero
 * tarro
 * teräsbetoni
 * varsta

Categories

 * Category:Childish

Redirections

 * Help:References → Help:Citations, Quotations, References
 * Autopatroller → Whitelist
 * Context templates → Context labels
 * Spanish → About Spanish

Inflections
I have noticed that Finnish inflection tables here and elsewhere suggest that certain inflections that sound OK to me are in fact not allowed in proper usage. This is not unexpected, for there are lots of conservative and seemingly arbitrary rules in the formal language. Here are my wonderings:


 * 1) Partitive singular of words like olio
 * Why isn’t ”olioa” an accepted form? Well, it sounds a little awkward, but so does oliota.


 * 1) Genitive plural of nouns ending in -i, e.g. tunti
 * Why isn’t ”tuntejen” an accepted form? This one puzzles me.

These word forms may have to do with regional variation in spoken language.

Irregular words
Natural languages contain irregular words. Sydän is one of those. Get over it and write the word like it is pronounced.

Future tense
I also think that it’s OK to use the future tense in Finnish, when approppriate (e.g., to make a sentence less ambiguous). I would guess that it is borrowed from Swedish, but so are many other things, and I don’t see how this useful tense is a bad thing for the language.

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