A2 Expression Neutro

kiva nähdä pitkästä aikaa

nice to see you after a long time

Significado

A friendly greeting used when meeting someone you have not seen for a while.

🌍

Contexto cultural

Finns value 'honest' greetings. If you say it's nice to see someone, you should mean it. The phrase is often followed by a genuine 'Mitä kuuluu?' where people actually share their news. In offices, this phrase is used to rebuild rapport after summer vacations (loma). It's a key part of the 'back to work' ritual in August. On social media, 'Pitkästä aikaa!' is a common comment on photos of old friends meeting up, often accompanied by heart emojis. In Northern Finland, people might be more reserved, but the phrase remains a staple. In the South, it's used more frequently and casually.

🎯

The 'No' prefix

Add 'No' at the beginning ('No pitkästä aikaa!') to sound exactly like a native speaker who is pleasantly surprised.

⚠️

Don't overthink the 'aikaa'

Even though 'aika' means time, in this phrase it's a fixed block. Don't try to pluralize it or change the case.

Significado

A friendly greeting used when meeting someone you have not seen for a while.

🎯

The 'No' prefix

Add 'No' at the beginning ('No pitkästä aikaa!') to sound exactly like a native speaker who is pleasantly surprised.

⚠️

Don't overthink the 'aikaa'

Even though 'aika' means time, in this phrase it's a fixed block. Don't try to pluralize it or change the case.

💬

Eye contact

When saying this, make brief but firm eye contact. It shows your 'kiva' is sincere.

Teste-se

Fill in the missing word in the elative case.

Kiva nähdä pitkästä _______!

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: aikaa

The phrase is 'pitkästä aikaa'. 'Aikaa' is the partitive form of 'aika', but here it's part of a fixed elative expression.

Which adjective makes the phrase more formal?

_______ nähdä pitkästä aikaa.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Mukava

'Mukava' is slightly more formal and 'proper' than the casual 'kiva'.

Match the phrase to the correct situation.

When should you say 'Kiva nähdä pitkästä aikaa'?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: To an old friend you haven't seen in a year

The phrase is specifically for reunions after a long period.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Moi Pekka! Kiva nähdä pitkästä aikaa! B: _________

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Kiitos samoin! Mitä kuuluu?

'Kiitos samoin' (Thanks, same to you) is the most natural response.

🎉 Pontuação: /4

Recursos visuais

Banco de exercicios

4 exercicios
Fill in the missing word in the elative case. Fill Blank A2

Kiva nähdä pitkästä _______!

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: aikaa

The phrase is 'pitkästä aikaa'. 'Aikaa' is the partitive form of 'aika', but here it's part of a fixed elative expression.

Which adjective makes the phrase more formal? Choose B1

_______ nähdä pitkästä aikaa.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Mukava

'Mukava' is slightly more formal and 'proper' than the casual 'kiva'.

Match the phrase to the correct situation. situation_matching A1

When should you say 'Kiva nähdä pitkästä aikaa'?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: To an old friend you haven't seen in a year

The phrase is specifically for reunions after a long period.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: Moi Pekka! Kiva nähdä pitkästä aikaa! B: _________

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Kiitos samoin! Mitä kuuluu?

'Kiitos samoin' (Thanks, same to you) is the most natural response.

🎉 Pontuação: /4

Perguntas frequentes

5 perguntas

There's no rule, but usually anything over a month qualifies. If it's been a year, it's definitely 'pitkästä aikaa'.

Yes! It's a great way to start an email to someone you haven't contacted in a while. 'Hei [Nimi], kiva nähdä (tai kuulla) pitkästä aikaa!'

'Kiva' is like 'nice/cool', 'mukava' is like 'pleasant/comfortable'. Both work perfectly here.

It's always 'pitkästä aikaa'. The two words go together.

Yes, if you haven't seen them in a while (e.g., after a vacation). It's polite and professional.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

Mitä kuuluu?

builds on

How are you? / What's up?

🔗

Pitkään aikaan

contrast

For a long time (used in negative sentences)

🔗

Nähdään taas!

similar

See you again!

🔗

Tervetuloa takaisin

specialized form

Welcome back

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