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A2 Finnish GrammarObject Pronouns (Accusative & Partitive)

Master Finnish object pronouns and learn when to use accusative versus partitive case. Finnish expresses 'me', 'you', 'him', 'her' through case endings on pronouns. Understanding when to use minut (accusative) versus minua (partitive) is essential for correct Finnish.

1Personal Pronouns as Objects

Finnish personal pronouns change form when used as objects. The two main object cases are accusative (for complete actions) and partitive (for incomplete, ongoing, or negative actions). The accusative forms end in -t for singular pronouns, while partitive forms use -a/-ä.

Object Pronoun Forms

SubjectAccusativePartitive
minä (I)minutminua
sinä (you)sinutsinua
hän (he/she)hänethäntä
me (we)meidätmeitä
te (you pl.)teidätteitä
he (they)heidätheitä

Examples

Hän näki minut kadulla.

He/she saw me on the street.

minut = accusative (complete action)

He kutsuivat meidät juhliin.

They invited us to the party.

meidät = accusative plural

Tunnetko hänet?

Do you know him/her?

hänet = accusative in question

Näitkö sinut peilissä?

Did you see yourself in the mirror?

sinut = accusative (completed action)

2Accusative vs. Partitive Choice

The choice between accusative and partitive depends on the completeness of the action. Use accusative when the action is complete, successful, or affects the whole object. Use partitive for ongoing actions, incomplete results, negation, and with certain verbs that always take partitive.

When to Use Each Case

UseCaseExample
complete actionaccusativeLöysin sinut. (I found you.)
ongoing actionpartitiveEtsin sinua. (I am looking for you.)
negationpartitiveEn nähnyt häntä. (I did not see him/her.)
emotion verbspartitiveRakastan sinua. (I love you.)

Examples

Odotan sinua.

I am waiting for you.

sinua = partitive (ongoing action)

En tunne heitä.

I do not know them.

heitä = partitive (negation)

Autan sinua huomenna.

I will help you tomorrow.

sinua = partitive (auttaa takes partitive)

Pelkään häntä.

I am afraid of him/her.

häntä = partitive (emotion verb)

3Verbs That Always Take Partitive

Some Finnish verbs always require their object in the partitive case, regardless of whether the action is complete. These include emotion verbs (rakastaa, vihata, pelätä), some communication verbs (kiittää, odottaa), and verbs of seeking or wanting (etsiä, tarvita, haluta).

Partitive-Requiring Verbs

VerbMeaningExample
rakastaato loveRakastan sinua.
vihatato hateHän vihaa minua.
odottaato wait forOdotan teitä.
auttaato helpAutan häntä.
tarvitato needTarvitsen sinua.
kiittääto thankKiitän teitä.

Examples

Tarvitsen sinua tänään.

I need you today.

tarvita always takes partitive

Kiitän teitä avusta.

I thank you for the help.

kiittää always takes partitive

Ikävöin sinua.

I miss you.

ikävöidä takes partitive

Häiritsenkö minua?

Am I disturbing you?

häiritä takes partitive

4Pronoun Position and Usage

Object pronouns typically come after the verb in Finnish, but they can move for emphasis. In questions and negative sentences, the pronoun follows the verb auxiliary. Unlike in English, Finnish does not have separate subject and object pronoun forms - the same stem takes different case endings.

Pronoun Positions

Sentence TypeOrderExample
statementverb + objectNäen sinut.
questionverb + objectNäetkö minut?
negativeneg + verb + objectEn näe sinua.
emphasisobject + verbSinut minä rakastan!

Examples

Ymmärrätkö minua?

Do you understand me?

minua follows question verb

Emme tunne heitä.

We do not know them.

heitä after negative verb

Hänet valitsimme johtajaksi.

Him/her we chose as leader.

hänet fronted for emphasis

Minua hän ei kuunnellut.

Me, he/she did not listen to.

minua fronted for contrast