Significado
Describing the color of the sky.
Contexto cultural
The blue sky is one of the two colors of the Finnish flag. Blue represents the thousands of lakes and the sky, while white represents the snow. In the north, the sky's color changes dramatically. During the polar night, the 'blue' is a deep violet, which is highly valued in traditional storytelling. In cities like Helsinki, 'sininen taivas' is a signal for everyone to go to 'terassi' (outdoor terraces) to enjoy a drink, regardless of the temperature. Many 'iskelmä' (Finnish schlager) songs use the blue sky as a metaphor for a lost love or a longing for home.
Agreement is Key
Always remember that if you change 'taivas' to another case, 'sininen' must follow it.
The Ultimate Icebreaker
Finns love talking about the weather. Mentioning the blue sky is the most positive way to start a chat.
Significado
Describing the color of the sky.
Agreement is Key
Always remember that if you change 'taivas' to another case, 'sininen' must follow it.
The Ultimate Icebreaker
Finns love talking about the weather. Mentioning the blue sky is the most positive way to start a chat.
Use with 'Kirkas'
Combine them: 'Kirkas sininen taivas' (A bright blue sky) for extra emphasis.
Teste-se
Fill in the missing word in the correct case.
Tänään on kaunis ______ taivas.
The sentence is a simple 'is' sentence where the subject is in the nominative case.
Which sentence is grammatically correct?
How do you say 'I am looking at the blue sky'?
The verb 'katsoa' requires the partitive case for its object.
Match the Finnish phrase with its English translation.
Match the following:
This tests your knowledge of Finnish case endings.
Complete the dialogue.
A: Onpa harmaa päivä. B: Niin on. Toivottavasti huomenna on ______.
The context of a 'grey day' suggests the speaker wants better weather.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Recursos visuais
Weather Vocabulary
Sky
- • sininen taivas
- • pilvinen taivas
- • yötaivas
Banco de exercicios
4 exerciciosTänään on kaunis ______ taivas.
The sentence is a simple 'is' sentence where the subject is in the nominative case.
How do you say 'I am looking at the blue sky'?
The verb 'katsoa' requires the partitive case for its object.
Combine cada item a esquerda com seu par a direita:
This tests your knowledge of Finnish case endings.
A: Onpa harmaa päivä. B: Niin on. Toivottavasti huomenna on ______.
The context of a 'grey day' suggests the speaker wants better weather.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Perguntas frequentes
12 perguntasYes, in Finnish 'taivas' is used for both the physical sky and the religious concept of heaven.
You say 'sinisen taivaan alla'.
It is neutral. It's used by children and professors alike.
Finnish treats the sky as a surface you are 'on' (adessive) rather than a container you are 'in' (inessive).
Only in poetry or brand names (like 'Sini-tuote'). In speech, use 'sininen'.
You can say 'tummansininen taivas'.
Technically 'siniset taivaat', but it's rarely used unless speaking poetically about 'many skies'.
Taivas muuttui siniseksi.
Extremely. It's a staple of Finnish lyrics.
Harmaa taivas (grey sky) or pilvinen taivas (cloudy sky).
No, for eyes use 'siniset silmät'. 'Sininen taivas' is only for the sky.
Only in 'blue-sky thinking' translations, but usually, Finns use different idioms for that.
Frases relacionadas
taivaansininen
similarSky-blue (the color)
kirkas sää
similarClear weather
pilvinen taivas
contrastCloudy sky
sininen hetki
builds onThe blue moment
päiväpaiste
similarSunshine