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  1. Finnish ( endonym: suomi [ˈsuo̯mi] ⓘ or suomen kieli [ˈsuo̯meŋ ˈkie̯li]) is a Uralic language of the Finnic branch, spoken by the majority of the population in Finland and by ethnic Finns outside of Finland. Finnish is one of the two official languages of Finland, alongside Swedish.

  2. May 14, 2024 · Finnish language. Elias Lönnrot (born April 9, 1802, Sammatti, Swedish Finland—died March 19, 1884, Sammatti, Russian Finland) was a folklorist and philologist who created the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala (1835, enlarged 1849), from short ballads and lyric poems collected from oral tradition. He also published Kanteletar (1840–41 ...

  3. A simple answer to both questions is no. Both Swedish (one of the two official languages of Finland) and Russian belong to the Indo-European group of languages, while Finnish is a Finno-Ugric language. The latter group also includes Hungarian, Estonian, Sámi (spoken by the indigenous people of northern Finland, Sweden and Norway and ...

  4. Feb 26, 2018 · But nowhere did I find any mention of the nameSuomi’, or why modern-day Finns still prefer to use it over ‘Finland’. “There is no certain knowledge about the real origin of the nameSuomi’,” said museum curator Satu Frondelius. “One theory is that Suomi comes from word ‘ suomaa ’ which means ‘swampland’ in Finnish.”.

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  6. In Persian and Urdu , -stan means “where one stands” or “place of.”. The Indo-European root word sta is used to signify “stands” and “settlement,” and this root still appears in Russian. The construction -istan appears in Persian and means “land.”. So, the word Tajikistan means essentially “land of the Tajiks.”.

  7. Oct 15, 2017 · A definitive taxonomy of the world's country name origins. ... and Suomi, not Finland.) If a country was named after an existing place—Chad after Lake Chad, or Algeria after the city of Algiers ...

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