Sataa lunta
It is snowing
Phrase in 30 Seconds
Use 'Sataa lunta' to describe the magical moment when snow falls from the Finnish sky.
- Means: 'It is snowing' or literally 'It rains snow'.
- Used in: Daily weather updates, small talk, and winter descriptions.
- Don't confuse: Never say 'Lumi sataa'; the snow (lunta) must be in partitive.
Explanation at your level:
المعنى
Winter weather.
خلفية ثقافية
The 'ensilumi' (first snow) is a psychological turning point for Finns, bringing light to the dark autumn. The Sami people have hundreds of words for different types of snow conditions, reflecting its importance for reindeer herding. Heavy snowfall in cities leads to 'lumikaaos' (snow chaos), a common headline in newspapers. Snow is often used as a metaphor for silence, peace, or isolation in Finnish poetry.
The Partitive Rule
Always remember 'lunta'. If you say 'lumi', a Finn will understand you but it will sound very 'foreign'.
No 'It'
Don't start with 'Se' (It). Just start with 'Sataa'.
المعنى
Winter weather.
The Partitive Rule
Always remember 'lunta'. If you say 'lumi', a Finn will understand you but it will sound very 'foreign'.
No 'It'
Don't start with 'Se' (It). Just start with 'Sataa'.
Small Talk Gold
If you don't know what to say to a Finn, just look out the window and say 'Sataa lunta'. They will agree with 'Niin sataa'.
اختبر نفسك
Fill in the correct form of 'snow' in the partitive case.
Ulkona sataa ______.
The partitive case 'lunta' is required after the weather verb 'sataa'.
Which sentence is grammatically correct?
How do you say 'It is snowing'?
Finnish doesn't use 'se' as a dummy subject, and 'lunta' must be partitive.
Complete the dialogue.
A: Sataako ulkona? B: Kyllä, ______.
Given the winter context of this lesson, 'sataa lunta' is the logical answer.
Match the sentence to the situation.
You see the first snow of the year.
'Ensilumi' specifically refers to the first snow of the season.
🎉 النتيجة: /4
وسائل تعلم بصرية
Winter Vocabulary
Action
- • sataa lunta
- • pyryttää
- • tuiskuttaa
الأسئلة الشائعة
10 أسئلةYes, changing the order is common in spoken language to emphasize the snow.
It is neutral and used in all contexts, from news to slang.
You can say 'Sataa vähän lunta'.
Because snow is an uncountable substance in an ongoing action, requiring the partitive case.
Lumisade lakkasi.
No, Finnish uses the collocation 'sataa lunta'.
Yes, if it's falling from a machine, you can still say 'sataa lunta'.
It means 'first snow' of the season.
Yes, for past tense use 'satoi'.
Constantly! It's a staple of Finnish Christmas and winter music.
عبارات ذات صلة
sataa vettä
similarto rain
sataa räntää
similarto sleet
pyryttää
specialized formto snow heavily with wind
tulla lunta
synonymsnow is coming
أين تستخدمها
Looking out the window
A: Katso ulos!
B: Oho, sataa lunta!
Weather forecast
Meteorologi: Huomenna sataa lunta koko maassa.
Katsoja: Täytyy vaihtaa talvirenkaat.
Texting a friend
Minna: Täällä sataa lunta! Mennäänkö ulos?
Ville: Joo, mennään hiihtämään!
Small talk at work
Työntekijä 1: Aika kovaa sataa lunta tänään.
Työntekijä 2: Niin sataa, onneksi tulin bussilla.
Driving a car
Kuski: Alkoi sataa lunta, täytyy ajaa varovasti.
Matkustaja: Joo, näkyvyys on huono.
Travel planning
Turisti: Sataako Lapissa lunta joulukuussa?
Opas: Kyllä, siellä sataa melkein aina lunta silloin.
Memorize It
Mnemonic
Think of 'Sataa' as 'Sat on' and 'Lunta' as 'Lint' (white fluff). I 'Sat on' the white 'Lint' (snow).
Visual Association
Imagine a giant cloud sitting on a Finnish forest, shaking out white powdered sugar (lunta) from a giant sifter.
Rhyme
Sataa lunta, nähdään unta. (It's snowing, we are dreaming.)
Story
You are in Helsinki. You look up and see 'Sataa' (the sky pouring). You catch a flake and realize it's 'Lunta' (the partitive substance of winter). You smile because now you can go skiing.
Word Web
تحدٍّ
Every time you see a white car today, whisper 'Sataa lunta' to yourself to associate the color white with the phrase.
In Other Languages
Nieva
Spanish uses a dedicated verb, while Finnish uses 'to rain' + 'snow'.
Il neige
French requires a subject; Finnish forbids it.
Es schneit
German is subject-prominent; Finnish is verb-initial for weather.
雪が降る (Yuki ga furu)
Japanese uses 'fall' (furu), while Finnish uses 'rain' (sataa).
تثلج (Tuthlij)
Arabic is a single-word verb; Finnish is a two-word collocation.
下雪 (Xià xuě)
The verb 'xià' is more general than the Finnish 'sataa'.
눈이 온다 (Nun-i onda)
Korean uses 'come', while standard Finnish uses 'rain'.
Está nevando
Portuguese uses the auxiliary 'to be'; Finnish is a simple impersonal verb.
Easily Confused
Learners confuse snow with hail.
Snow (lunta) is soft and white; hail (rakeita) is hard ice balls.
Learners use this to mean it's snowing.
This means the ground is already white, not that snow is currently falling.
الأسئلة الشائعة (10)
Yes, changing the order is common in spoken language to emphasize the snow.
It is neutral and used in all contexts, from news to slang.
You can say 'Sataa vähän lunta'.
Because snow is an uncountable substance in an ongoing action, requiring the partitive case.
Lumisade lakkasi.
No, Finnish uses the collocation 'sataa lunta'.
Yes, if it's falling from a machine, you can still say 'sataa lunta'.
It means 'first snow' of the season.
Yes, for past tense use 'satoi'.
Constantly! It's a staple of Finnish Christmas and winter music.