mennä

Etymology
From, from. Cognates include 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Verb

 * 1)  to go  move away from a point of reference
 * 2)  to go, extend
 * 3)  to go, lead of a path, etc.
 * 4)  to go, turn out, proceed
 * 5)  to go, enter, get, begin, start  general verb for describing entering some kind of state
 * 6)  to be spent; take, pass, spend, go time, resources, etc.
 * 7)  to go (and [do])  do an action, implying that someone should be criticized for doing it
 * 8) to go, fit
 * 9)  to do, be good enough
 * 10)  to sell
 * 1)  to go, turn out, proceed
 * 2)  to go, enter, get, begin, start  general verb for describing entering some kind of state
 * 3)  to be spent; take, pass, spend, go time, resources, etc.
 * 4)  to go (and [do])  do an action, implying that someone should be criticized for doing it
 * 5) to go, fit
 * 6)  to do, be good enough
 * 7)  to sell
 * 1)  to be spent; take, pass, spend, go time, resources, etc.
 * 2)  to go (and [do])  do an action, implying that someone should be criticized for doing it
 * 3) to go, fit
 * 4)  to do, be good enough
 * 5)  to sell
 * 1)  to go (and [do])  do an action, implying that someone should be criticized for doing it
 * 2) to go, fit
 * 3)  to do, be good enough
 * 4)  to sell
 * 1) to go, fit
 * 2)  to do, be good enough
 * 3)  to sell
 * 1)  to do, be good enough
 * 2)  to sell
 * 1)  to sell
 * 1)  to sell

Usage notes

 * This usage is intransitive and never receives a direct object. That which is spent is grammatically the subject despite it usually being placed after the verb, like in the usage examples above. The fact that it is a subject can be seen in that it exhibits the nominative case:
 * In the first usage example, is used, and the verb thus neither has a subject nor an object.
 * What the resources are spent on (the subject for ) is expressed in the illative case (for verbs, the illative case of the or other action noun) and is often placed before the verb, as if it were a subject.
 * In the first usage example, is used, and the verb thus neither has a subject nor an object.
 * What the resources are spent on (the subject for ) is expressed in the illative case (for verbs, the illative case of the or other action noun) and is often placed before the verb, as if it were a subject.

Conjugation
Colloquially, the present stem may be replaced in some forms with :

Etymology
From. Cognates include 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬.

Verb

 * 1)  to go
 * 2)  to leave
 * 3)  to fit
 * 4)  to go by
 * 5)  to die
 * 6)  to become wasted