C1 Collocation Formel

hakea muutosta

to seek change

Signification

To actively try to improve or alter a situation.

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Contexte culturel

The right to 'hakea muutosta' is a fundamental part of 'hyvä hallinto' (good administration). It is culturally expected that authorities provide clear instructions on how to do this. Similar to other Nordics, the Finnish system emphasizes transparency. Seeking change is seen as a way to ensure the system works correctly, not as an attack on the official. In Finnish work culture, 'hakemassa muutosta' often signals that an employee is looking for internal rotation or new tasks before they decide to quit. The Finnish legal system is less adversarial than the US system. 'Hakea muutosta' is a procedural step rather than a 'battle'.

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Use in Job Interviews

Instead of saying 'I want a new job,' say 'Haen muutosta uralleni.' It sounds much more professional and goal-oriented.

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The Partitive Trap

Always remember the 'a' at the end of 'muutosta'. 'Hakea muutos' sounds like you are picking up a physical object named 'Change'.

Signification

To actively try to improve or alter a situation.

🎯

Use in Job Interviews

Instead of saying 'I want a new job,' say 'Haen muutosta uralleni.' It sounds much more professional and goal-oriented.

⚠️

The Partitive Trap

Always remember the 'a' at the end of 'muutosta'. 'Hakea muutos' sounds like you are picking up a physical object named 'Change'.

💬

Polite Disagreement

Using this phrase with authorities is the most polite way to say 'You are wrong and I want you to fix it.'

Teste-toi

Fill in the missing word in the correct case.

Hän päätti hakea ______ (muutos) elämäänsä.

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : muutosta

The verb 'hakea' in this context requires the partitive case.

Which sentence is a correct legal appeal?

Miten sanot virallisesti, että valitat päätöksestä?

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : Haen muutosta päätökseen.

'Hakea muutosta' + illative is the standard formal expression.

Match the sentence to the context.

1. 'Haen muutosta uraani.' 2. 'Haen muutosta tuomioon.'

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : 1: Career, 2: Legal

'Ura' means career, 'tuomio' means verdict/sentence.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Saitko kielteisen päätöksen? B: Kyllä, aion ______ ______ .

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : hakea muutosta

This is the most natural response to a negative administrative decision.

🎉 Score : /4

Aides visuelles

Banque d exercices

4 exercices
Fill in the missing word in the correct case. Fill Blank B1

Hän päätti hakea ______ (muutos) elämäänsä.

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : muutosta

The verb 'hakea' in this context requires the partitive case.

Which sentence is a correct legal appeal? Choose B2

Miten sanot virallisesti, että valitat päätöksestä?

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : Haen muutosta päätökseen.

'Hakea muutosta' + illative is the standard formal expression.

Match the sentence to the context. situation_matching A2

1. 'Haen muutosta uraani.' 2. 'Haen muutosta tuomioon.'

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : 1: Career, 2: Legal

'Ura' means career, 'tuomio' means verdict/sentence.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion B1

A: Saitko kielteisen päätöksen? B: Kyllä, aion ______ ______ .

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : hakea muutosta

This is the most natural response to a negative administrative decision.

🎉 Score : /4

Questions fréquentes

10 questions

No, but it's most common there. You can also use it for career, lifestyle, or political changes.

Technically no. In 99% of cases, it must be 'muutosta' (partitive) because the action is not 'completing' the change, but 'seeking' it.

'Valittaa' is more direct ('to appeal/complain'). 'Hakea muutosta' is the broader, more formal category of seeking a different outcome.

Haen muutosta elämääni. (Note the illative 'elämääni').

Yes, often with hashtags like #muutos or #ura when people talk about their personal journeys.

Not at all. It sounds determined and formal. It's much less aggressive than 'vaatia' (to demand).

Yes, companies often 'hakevat muutosta' to their strategy or market position.

It's the legal 'right to seek change' (right of appeal).

In casual speech, people just say 'haluan vaihtelua' (I want variety).

'Hakea' implies a formal process or application, which fits the 'seeking change' concept better in Finnish.

Expressions liées

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muutoksenhaku

specialized form

The act of appealing (noun).

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valittaa päätöksestä

synonym

To appeal a decision.

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oikaisuvaatimus

builds on

A request for rectification.

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etsiä uusia haasteita

similar

To look for new challenges.

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