Significado
Informal response.
Contexto cultural
Finns often use 'Ei mitään' to avoid appearing boastful. If you thank a Finn profusely, they might even look a bit uncomfortable and say 'Ei mitään' quickly to move the focus away from themselves. Among young people in Helsinki, 'Ei mitään' is often replaced by the English 'No prob' or 'Eipä täs', showing the influence of global English on local slang. In the Savo region, people might be more verbose. Instead of a simple 'Ei mitään', they might say 'Eipä tuo mittään haitannu', adding a local dialect twist. In Finnish offices, 'Ei mitään' is used to signal that a task was part of the routine and no special recognition is needed, reinforcing the flat hierarchy.
The 'Spoken' Drop
Drop the final 'n' to sound 10x more like a native Finn. 'Ei mitää' is the secret handshake of Finnish learners.
Don't over-thank
If a Finn says 'Ei mitään', stop thanking them. Continuing to thank them can make the situation awkward.
Significado
Informal response.
The 'Spoken' Drop
Drop the final 'n' to sound 10x more like a native Finn. 'Ei mitää' is the secret handshake of Finnish learners.
Don't over-thank
If a Finn says 'Ei mitään', stop thanking them. Continuing to thank them can make the situation awkward.
The Mumble
You don't need to shout this. A quiet, slightly mumbled 'ei mitään' is often more authentic than a loud, clear one.
Double it up
Saying 'Ei mitään, ei mitään' (twice) makes you sound very reassuring and friendly.
Ponte a prueba
Fill in the most natural informal response.
A: Kiitti tosi paljon avusta! B: _________.
'Ei mitään' is the most natural informal way to respond to 'Kiitti' (thanks).
Match the phrase to the situation.
Someone accidentally steps on your toe and says 'Anteeksi!'. What do you say?
'Ei mitään' (It's nothing) is the standard response to a minor apology.
Which of these is the most casual/slang version?
How would you write 'No problem' in a text to a close friend?
Dropping the final 'n' is a hallmark of spoken/informal Finnish.
Complete the phrase used to respond to 'How are you?'.
Mitä kuuluu? - Ei _________ erikoista.
The partitive 'mitään' is required after the negative 'ei'.
🎉 Puntuación: /4
Ayudas visuales
Banco de ejercicios
4 ejerciciosA: Kiitti tosi paljon avusta! B: _________.
'Ei mitään' is the most natural informal way to respond to 'Kiitti' (thanks).
Someone accidentally steps on your toe and says 'Anteeksi!'. What do you say?
'Ei mitään' (It's nothing) is the standard response to a minor apology.
How would you write 'No problem' in a text to a close friend?
Dropping the final 'n' is a hallmark of spoken/informal Finnish.
Mitä kuuluu? - Ei _________ erikoista.
The partitive 'mitään' is required after the negative 'ei'.
🎉 Puntuación: /4
Preguntas frecuentes
10 preguntasNo, it's not rude at all! It's the standard informal way to be polite. However, in very formal settings, 'Ole hyvä' is safer.
Yes, if your workplace is casual (which most Finnish workplaces are). If your boss is very senior or the setting is formal, use 'Eipä kestä'.
'Ei mitään' is a general response to thanks. 'Ei se mitään' is specifically used to respond to apologies (meaning 'It doesn't matter').
Because the verb 'ei' triggers the partitive case for the object/pronoun that follows it in this context.
No. If you don't understand, say 'En ymmärrä'. 'Ei mitään' means 'nothing'.
Yes, it's universal, though the pronunciation varies slightly (e.g., 'mittään' in the east).
In a casual email, 'Ei mitään' is fine. In a formal one, use 'Olkaa hyvä' or 'Eipä kestä'.
No. When giving a gift, always use 'Ole hyvä'. 'Ei mitään' is only for responding to words of thanks.
It's just a slightly more casual and friendly version of 'Ei mitään'. The '-pä' adds a bit of flavor.
In slang, people sometimes just say 'mitää' or 'eipä mitää'.
Frases relacionadas
Eipä kestä
similarNo need [to thank]
Ole hyvä
similarYou are welcome / Please
Ei se mitään
specialized formIt's nothing / It doesn't matter
Ei kestä kiittää
similarNo need to thank
Mitäs tässä
builds onNothing much [here]
Ei haittaa
similarNo harm done / It doesn't matter