A1 Idiom 비격식체

Puhua puuta heinää

Talk nonsense

Speaking about irrelevant or silly things.

🌍

문화적 배경

Finns value 'rehellisyys' (honesty) and 'suoruus' (directness). Talking 'puuta heinää' is seen as a waste of everyone's time. The idiom reflects the historical importance of timber and agriculture. Wood and hay were the background of life, not the focus of high-level talk. Journalists often use this phrase to call out 'jargon' or 'kapulakieli' (wooden language) used by officials. Self-deprecating humor often involves admitting one is talking 'puuta heinää' when they realize they are rambling.

💡

The 'Asia' Rule

If you want to sound like a native, use this phrase to contrast with 'puhua asiaa'. It shows you understand the Finnish value of meaningful speech.

⚠️

Watch the Case

Never say 'puhua puu heinä'. The partitive -ta and -ää are essential for the idiom to sound correct.

Speaking about irrelevant or silly things.

💡

The 'Asia' Rule

If you want to sound like a native, use this phrase to contrast with 'puhua asiaa'. It shows you understand the Finnish value of meaningful speech.

⚠️

Watch the Case

Never say 'puhua puu heinä'. The partitive -ta and -ää are essential for the idiom to sound correct.

🎯

Use with 'Ihan'

Adding 'ihan' (completely/totally) before the phrase makes it sound very natural: 'Hän puhuu ihan puuta heinää.'

💬

Polite Dismissal

It's a great way to disagree with someone without using strong swear words.

셀프 테스트

Fill in the missing words in the partitive case.

Älä usko häntä, hän puhuu taas ______ ______.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: puuta heinää

The idiom requires the partitive forms 'puuta' and 'heinää'.

Which situation is best for using 'puhua puuta heinää'?

When would you use this phrase?

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: When a friend tells a story about a flying cat.

The phrase is informal and used for nonsensical or exaggerated stories.

Complete the dialogue.

A: 'Tiesitkö, että Suomessa on kaksi aurinkoa?' B: 'Lopeta jo tuo ______ ______!'

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: puun heinän puhuminen

When using 'Lopeta' (Stop), we often use the genitive form of the action: 'puun heinän puhuminen'.

Match the Finnish phrase with its English equivalent.

Match the following:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Puhua puuta heinää - To talk nonsense

These are direct opposites or related actions.

🎉 점수: /4

시각 학습 자료

Substance vs. Nonsense

Puhua Asiaa
Facts Faktat
Puhua Puuta Heinää
Nonsense Pötyä

연습 문제 은행

4 연습 문제
Fill in the missing words in the partitive case. Fill Blank A1

Älä usko häntä, hän puhuu taas ______ ______.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: puuta heinää

The idiom requires the partitive forms 'puuta' and 'heinää'.

Which situation is best for using 'puhua puuta heinää'? Choose A1

When would you use this phrase?

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: When a friend tells a story about a flying cat.

The phrase is informal and used for nonsensical or exaggerated stories.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: 'Tiesitkö, että Suomessa on kaksi aurinkoa?' B: 'Lopeta jo tuo ______ ______!'

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: puun heinän puhuminen

When using 'Lopeta' (Stop), we often use the genitive form of the action: 'puun heinän puhuminen'.

Match the Finnish phrase with its English equivalent. Match A1

왼쪽의 각 항목을 오른쪽의 짝과 연결하세요:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Puhua puuta heinää - To talk nonsense

These are direct opposites or related actions.

🎉 점수: /4

자주 묻는 질문

12 질문

The standard idiom is 'puuta heinää' without the 'ja'. Adding 'ja' makes it sound more literal and less like a fixed expression.

It's informal and dismissive. It's not a swear word, but telling someone they are talking 'puuta heinää' is a direct challenge to their honesty or logic.

Yes! You can say 'Me vain puhuttiin puuta heinää' to mean you had a casual, unimportant conversation.

'Puuta' is the partitive singular of 'puu', which means wood or tree.

Only if the atmosphere is very casual and you are among close colleagues. Otherwise, it's too informal.

Not exactly. It can mean lying, but it can also mean just talking about irrelevant things or rambling.

Conjugate 'puhua' normally: puhun, puhut, puhuu, puhumme, puhutte, puhuvat.

Rarely, some might say 'puita heinää', but 'puuta heinää' is the standard form you should learn.

The closest equivalents are 'talking rubbish', 'talking nonsense', or 'babbling'.

Yes, it is a universally understood idiom across all Finnish dialects.

No, the order is fixed. It's always wood first, then hay.

Absolutely! It's a fun, easy-to-remember idiom that will impress Finns.

관련 표현

🔄

Puhua palturia

synonym

To tell tall tales or lies.

🔗

Puhua läpiä päähänsä

similar

To talk absolute nonsense.

🔗

Puhua asiaa

contrast

To speak sense/facts.

🔗

Lasketella luikuria

similar

To tell smooth lies.

🔗

Puhua pehmoisia

similar

To talk silly/sweet/nonsense.

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