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Finnish

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From Cantonese to Thai, Gaelic to Modern Persian, learning the languages of the world is attainable for any beginning student. Learners can use the Teach Yourself Complete Language Courses at their own pace or as a supplement to formal courses.

All Teach Yourself Complete Language Courses include:

Up-to-date, graded interactive dialogues Graded units of culture notes, grammar, and exercises Step-by-step guides to pronunciation Practical vocabulary Regular and irregular verb tables A bilingual glossary A clear, uncluttered, and user-friendly layout Self-assessment quizzes to test progress Fully updated audio recordings on CD for easy access and review

371 pages, Audio CD

Published April 18, 2005

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About the author

Terttu Leney

14 books4 followers

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Brett C.
948 reviews231 followers
May 2, 2021
This is a good way to learn Finnish. The book is designed for someone with no working knowledge of Finnish. The structured sessions will take you beyond the basic beginner to an intermediate student. The text is standard Teach Yourself to include the dialogue, vocabulary sets, and grammar explanations. Each chapter is a different theme like greetings and introductions, eating, going out, going on a trip, etc. The accompanying audio is good and a necessity to learning this pretty language. I would suggest this to anyone wishing to learn this unique sounding language. Thanks!
Profile Image for Christopher.
1,442 reviews224 followers
July 15, 2007
Before moving to Finland for graduate school, I purchased this textbook by Terttu Leney in its earlier incarnation as TEACH YOURSELF FINNISH (the title has changed, but the content remains almost entirely the same). Leney's is the most widely available Finnish textbook in the English-speaking world, and it did equip me with enough basic Finnish to comfortably settle into life in Finland. However, the book is not perfect, and in spite of its strengths it pales in many respects to other, more obscure textbooks.

Leney's book generally follows the contemporary Teach Yourself format: dialogues are followed by vocabulary (first phrase-for-phrase glosses, then individual new words), then come exercises, and finally at the end of each lesson is a dialogue spoken more quickly in more authentic language that the student is challenged to at least get the gist of. Each lesson is dedicated to a specific subject, such as shopping, going to the doctor, or (towards the end) talking about history and politics. There are Finnish-English and English-Finnish vocabularies and, something which all other TY volumes should emulate, some advice on where to go next (books, websites, radio, etc.).

While things like asking directions is a typical topic in beginner's textbook, I rather disagree with Leney's giving it so much attention. The lost tourist asking directions in limited Finnish is likely just going to be answered in English, Finnish people being so at ease with talking to foreigns in it. Rather, the challenge for people new to Finland is feeling at ease with a group of native speakers, such as classmates or coworkers, and so starting off with asking directions isn't so efficient, nor is the early emphasis on talking to bank tellers.

The CDs are absolutely essential. With a sound system so different from English, Finnish is not a language that can be learnt well just off the page. Even if you have a couple of Finnish friends, chances are they couldn't enunciate like the folks on the CDs. Teach Yourself CDs vary widely in quality, but these are very good, with a large cast of voice actors so you just used to different voices, and a good mix of clear and "street" enunciation.

What's wrong with Leney's course? Well, as a one-volume course its exercises are woefully insufficient. Agglutinating languages need much more drill than, say, Spanish or Italian, but the exercises here are few and train the student more to utter stock phrases than to internalize the huge amount of endings that conversational Finnish requires. It would have been better if Teach Yourself had commissioned a course from Leney in two volumes, a beginner's and an intermediate, which would have provided space for much more drill. Teach Yourself has done this for some languages, but regrettably not "smaller" ones.

If you want to learn Finnish, by all means acquire TEACH YOURSELF FINNISH. However, at the same time you need to get a few other books. In my Finnish for foreigners courses at University of Helsinki, the assigned textbooks were Leena Silfverberg's SUOMEN KIELEN ALKEISOPPIKIRJA and SUOMEN KIELEN JATKO-OPPIKIRJA (both published by Finn Lectura). While it might be a bit of work ordering those, and much in them is designed for classroom use, they abound in just the type of rigorous exercises that Leney's course lacks. Leela White's From Start to Finnish (Finn Lectura, 2003) is also a useful textbook, and is available though this very site.

This is not a bad course. However, like breakfast cereal that advertisements claim to be part of a balanced breakfast showing it in photos alongside bread and fruit, Terttu Leney's TEACH YOURSELF FINNISH is but one element towards proficiency in Finnish.
Profile Image for Dori Mort.
8 reviews
June 27, 2013
A pretty good introduction to the Finnish language, I've found.

I will probably try the Teach Yourself books for any language I want to learn about based on this one.
Profile Image for Heather Heins.
2 reviews1 follower
April 4, 2015
Currently using this to study. I feel like it's a bit out of order (like learning to tell time/ask the time before learning numbers). It has been very helpful though.
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