hän

Etymology
From, from. Cognates include 🇨🇬.

In practically all dialects (except potentially Ingrian Finnish), is the most common third-person pronoun for people, and this is also reflected in colloquial Finnish. was most often used in indirect speech (as a logophoric pronoun), potentially with a nuance of doubt or disbelief, although in southwestern, southeastern and far northern eastern dialects it was used more widely in subordinate clauses. The use of as a general third-person pronoun may thus be a literary feature.

Pronoun

 * 1)  he, she, one, (singular) they
 * 2) he, she, one, they, it in indirect speech: referring to the subject of the main clause, regardless of whether they are a human being or not, i.e. logophoric pronoun

Usage notes

 * In standard Finnish, is generally not omitted, despite the verb showing both the person and the number (compare the usage of ). This is in contrast to the first and second person pronouns which may freely be omitted, with the person being implied by the verb form.
 * In colloquial and dialectal Finnish, the inanimate (demonstrative) pronoun is mostly used instead of, the latter being reserved for certain particular uses such as to indicate that another speaker is being paraphrased. Yet in some others (such as Kven), both pronouns are used in the same role.

Declension

 * Irregular. The comitative and instructive forms don't exist; the abessive is hardly used. To be more precise: the singular stem is declined like type 32 (sisar) in the singular cases, except for the accusative singular form (see following note).
 * In addition to the standard set of cases, and the other personal pronouns have a specific accusative form, . This form would have been the nominative plural form of the first stem, if the word were not a personal pronoun.
 * The shorter forms, and  exist for the adessive, ablative and allative respectively, but these are dated or jocular except in poetic use and some set phrases.

Etymology
From, from.

Pronoun

 * 1) he, she (animate)

Etymology
From, with influence from , both ultimately related to.

Adverb

 * 1)  away, hence (and often by implication to somewhere else)

Etymology
From, from. Cognate to 🇨🇬. False cognate with Swedish.

Pronoun

 * 1) he, she