tehdä

Etymology
From (compare 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬), from  (compare 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬; see the Proto-Uralic entry for more).

Verb

 * 1)  to do, perform, execute, carry out
 * 2)  to make, manufacture
 * 3)  to commit, perpetrate, carry out, conduct to do, as a crime, sin, or fault
 * 4)  to make, render cause to be
 * 5)  to make, cost
 * 6)  to do a, pull a copy or emulate the actions or behaviour that is associated with the person or thing mentioned
 * 7)  to be in the process of
 * 8)  to feel
 * 9)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 10)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 1)  to make, cost
 * 2)  to do a, pull a copy or emulate the actions or behaviour that is associated with the person or thing mentioned
 * 3)  to be in the process of
 * 4)  to feel
 * 5)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 6)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 1)  to make, cost
 * 2)  to do a, pull a copy or emulate the actions or behaviour that is associated with the person or thing mentioned
 * 3)  to be in the process of
 * 4)  to feel
 * 5)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 6)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 1)  to be in the process of
 * 2)  to feel
 * 3)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 4)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 1)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 2)  to have, bear give birth to children
 * 1)  to have, bear give birth to children

Usage notes

 * Which of the two options is used depends on the part of speech of the result. A noun is practically always expressed with the elative + accusative construction, while an adjective is primarily expressed with accusative + translative, although elative + accusative is sometimes used as well (especially when talking about personal perception or when the action does not render something into a result, but rather a consequence; see the usage examples above).
 * What or who is being emulated is practically always in the plural, even if plural forms would not normally be used for that particular word (such as with country names).