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Finland Swedish

Finland Swedish or Fenno-Swedish[1] (Swedish: finlandssvenska; Finnish: suomenruotsi) is a general term for the variety of the Swedish language and a closely related group of Swedish dialects spoken in Finland by the Swedish-speaking population, commonly also referred to as Finland Swedes, as their first language.

Finland Swedish
Fenno-Swedish
finlandssvenska
Unofficial flag of the Swedish-speakers in Finland
RegionWestern and southern coast of Finland, Åland
EthnicityFinland Swedes
Indo-European
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologeast2303
IETFsv-FI

For the most part, these dialects and the dialects spoken in Sweden are mutually intelligible, although some archaic dialects in Ostrobothnia are practically unintelligible to Swedish-speaking people in southern Finland (and in Sweden). Most Swedish-speaking Finns emphasize that Finland Swedish is not a language separate from the Swedish of Sweden. The Swedish dialects in Finland are considered varieties of Swedish, and the norm for written Standard Swedish is completely applicable also for Finland Swedish. Today, Swedish dialects are spoken in four different regions in Finland: Ostrobothnia, Åland, Southwest Finland and Uusimaa.

Swedish as spoken in Finland is regulated by the Swedish Department of the Institute for the Languages of Finland. This regulation includes the officially stated aim of keeping Finland Swedish close to the Swedish as spoken in Sweden and strongly phrased advice against loanwords and calques from Finnish, which are usually incomprehensible to Swedes.

It is said that the municipality with the highest proportion of Swedish speakers in the world, Larsmo (93% as of 2017), is located in Finland. Korsnäs has also been cited as such. However, as there are no official statistics on the mother tongue of inhabitants of Sweden, this is impossible to verify. In addition bilingualism is very common for immigrants in Sweden, so the term Swedish-speaking may be deceptive in that sense.

In the spoken vernacular, especially among young people in Finnish-dominated areas, Finnish loanwords as well as calques from Finnish are frequently incorporated into Finland Swedish. There are also some words in Finland Swedish that would be considered slightly archaic in Sweden. Some government and public service terms that have been created in recent centuries also differ. The same is true of other new words, notably loanwords from English.

A common misconception among many Swedes is that Finland Swedish is simply Swedish spoken with a Finnish accent, something that can be a considerable source of frustration to most native Swedish-speakers in Finland.[weasel words][citation needed] Any language adopts features, especially pronunciation habits, from dominant languages it comes in touch with, but many of the traits of Finland Swedish exist also in monolingual areas and some are in fact preserved features of Old Swedish, as with Scots in comparison with English or Afrikaans in comparison with Dutch.

History

 
  Officially monolingual Finnish-speaking municipalities
  Bilingual municipalities with Finnish as the majority language
  Bilingual municipalities with Swedish as the majority language
  Monolingual Swedish-speaking municipalities (Åland)
  Sami bilingual municipalities
More than 17,000 Swedish-speaking Finns live in officially monolingual Finnish municipalities, and are thus not represented on the map.

Finland Swedish was a result of Swedish colonisation of Finland during the Northern Crusades in the 12th to 14th centuries. Colonisation focused on Finnish archipelago and some of its coastal regions. The colonisation led to the beginning of the Swedish-speaking population of Finland.[2][3]

From the 16th century, Swedish was the main language of jurisdiction, administration and higher education in Finland (which was then a part of Sweden), but the majority of the population in the Finnish inland spoke Finnish outside of these sectors of society, i.e. in normal, daily life. In 1809, when Finland was conquered by the Russian Empire and became an autonomous Grand Duchy, Swedish remained the only official language. In 1863, both Finnish and Swedish became official languages with equal status, and by the time of Finland's independence in 1917, after a Finnicization campaign by the Fennoman movement, Finnish clearly dominated in government and society. See further: Finland's language strife.

Finland has since then been a bilingual country with a Swedish-speaking minority (5.2% of mainland Finland's population in December 2019) living mostly in the coastal areas of southern, south-western, and western Finland. During the 20th century, the urbanization following the Industrial Revolution has led to large majorities of Finnish speakers in all major cities. The capital Helsinki (in Swedish Helsingfors) became predominantly Finnish-speaking as recently as around 1900. A large and important part of the Swedish-speaking population nevertheless lives in the capital.

The autonomous island province of Åland is an exception, being monolingually Swedish-speaking according to international treaties. It is a matter of definition whether the Swedish dialects spoken on Åland are to be considered a kind of Finland Swedish or not. Most Swedish-speaking Finns and linguists consider them to be closer to some of the dialects spoken in nearby parts of Sweden.

Official status

Swedish is one of the two official and national languages of the Republic of Finland, the other being Finnish. These two languages have formally equal status in nearly all legislation, though the status of Swedish in Finland has long been a subject of sociopolitical debate.[4][5] The other minority languages (such as Sami) are regulated separately.

Finland Swedish is regulated by the Institute for the Languages of Finland. Official Swedish is not supposed to be very different from Swedish as found in Sweden. There are however e.g. words regarded as archaic in Sweden, but commonly used in Finland, and terms that differ from their counterparts in Sweden, often because of slight differences in the related legislation.[6]

Bilingualism of municipalities is regulated by the Language Act of 2003.[7] If the minority has increased into at least 3,000 persons or 8% of inhabitants, then the municipality must become bilingual. If the minority has fallen below 3,000 persons and 6% of inhabitants, then the municipality becomes monolingual, unless it decides to keep its bilingual status. At present, only one such municipality has done so, namely Lohja (Lojo in Swedish). The status is reviewed once in a decade, and enacted by a government decree issued by the Finnish Council of State.

The country's public broadcaster, Yle, provides two Swedish-language radio stations, Yle Vega and Yle X3M. The Swedish-language TV channel Yle Fem was merged with Yle Teema in 2017 to form Yle Teema & Fem.

Phonology

 
Finland Swedish dialects.

With the exception of the dialects spoken in Ostrobothnia along the west coast, close to the Gulf of Bothnia (example: the dialect spoken in Närpes), Finland Swedish is not particularly different from Central Swedish. The phoneme /ʉː/ is more centralized and pronounced like [ʉː], quite similar to how many speakers of English pronounce /uː/ (as in moon). That should be compared to the Central Swedish [ʉ̟ː], which is very close to the short vowel [ʏː] and is more rounded.

The highly variable sj sound /ɧ/ varies between [ʂ] and [ɕ ~ ʃ] on the Finnish mainland, often close to sh in English shoe. In the Åland Islands, its realization is similar to the velar (and often labialized) pronunciations of nearby parts of Sweden. The historic k sound before front vowels and the tj sound, in modern Central Swedish a fricative /ɕ/, is an affricate [t͡ɕ] or [t͡ʃ] in all Finland Swedish dialects, close to ch in English chin, except for some[8] Åland Swedish, in which it is a simple fricative.[9][10][clarification needed]

The tonal word accent, which distinguishes some minimal pairs in most dialects of Swedish and Norwegian, is not present in Finland Swedish (except around the parish of Snappertuna, west of Helsinki). Hence, Sweden Swedish minimal pairs like /ˈandɛn/ ("the duck") and /ˇandɛn/ ("the spirit") are both pronounced [ˈandɛn] in Finland.

Finland Swedish lacks the aspirated stops present in Central Standard Swedish, making the contrast between "fortis" and "lenis" stops one of voicing only.[11] The retroflexion that occurs in many dialects when /r/ precedes a coronal consonant does not occur in certain pairs in Finland Swedish (e.g. /rt/, which is realized as [ʈ] in Standard Swedish but [rt] in Finland Swedish).[12]

Vocabulary

Finland Swedish mostly has the same vocabulary as Swedish in Sweden, and there is a conscious effort to adopt neologisms from Sweden, to maintain cohesion between the two varieties. Nevertheless, there are differences, which generally fall into two categories: words now considered archaic in Sweden, and loanwords and calques from Finnish or independently borrowed from other languages (nowadays mostly English). There are also some terms differing because of differing legislation.

See also

References

  1. ^ . The University of Iowa. May 11, 2011. Archived from the original on 26 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  2. ^ Georg Haggren, Petri Halinen, Mika Lavento, Sami Raninen and Anna Wessman (2015). Muinaisuutemme jäljet. Helsinki: Gaudeamus. pp. 420–421. ISBN 9789524953634.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "The Era of Swedish Rule, 1150-1809". History of Finland. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  4. ^ Hult, F.M., & Pietikäinen, S. (2014). Shaping discourses of multilingualism through a language ideological debate: The case of Swedish in Finland. Journal of Language and Politics, 13, 1-20.
  5. ^ Kolu, J.,Kuronen, M. & Palviainen, Å. (Eds.) (2016) Svenskan i Finland 16. Jyväskylä Studies in Humanities 298.
  6. ^ Hällström-Reijonen, Charlotta af; Reuter, Mikael (2008). Finlandssvensk ordbok (in Swedish). Helsingfors: Schildt & Forskningscentralen för de inhemska språken. ISBN 978-951-50-1749-9.
  7. ^ Kielilaki 6.6.2003/423 [Language Act of 2003.]
  8. ^ "Äldre man, Brändö: Har ätit sälkött". swedia.ling.gu.se/. Retrieved 11 February 2014.
  9. ^ "Yngre man, Brändö: Brandlarm på Nordsjön". swedia.ling.gu.se/. Retrieved 11 February 2014.
  10. ^ "snabbmeny". swedia.ling.gu.se/. Retrieved 11 February 2014.
  11. ^ Ringen, Catherine; Kari Suomi (2012). "The voicing contrast in Fenno-Swedish stops". Journal of Phonetics. 40 (3): 419–429. doi:10.1016/j.wocn.2012.02.010.
  12. ^ Kuronen, Mikko. "Finns det supradentala konsonanter även i finlandssvenskan?" (PDF). Svenskans beskrivning. Hallgren & Fallgren. Retrieved 5 November 2013.

External links

  • – a collection of dialect samples of Swedish including Finland Swedish

finland, swedish, confused, with, sweden, finnish, fenno, swedish, swedish, finlandssvenska, finnish, suomenruotsi, general, term, variety, swedish, language, closely, related, group, swedish, dialects, spoken, finland, swedish, speaking, population, commonly,. Not to be confused with Sweden Finnish Finland Swedish or Fenno Swedish 1 Swedish finlandssvenska Finnish suomenruotsi is a general term for the variety of the Swedish language and a closely related group of Swedish dialects spoken in Finland by the Swedish speaking population commonly also referred to as Finland Swedes as their first language Finland SwedishFenno SwedishfinlandssvenskaUnofficial flag of the Swedish speakers in FinlandRegionWestern and southern coast of Finland AlandEthnicityFinland SwedesLanguage familyIndo European GermanicNorth GermanicEast ScandinavianSwedishFinland SwedishLanguage codesISO 639 3 Glottologeast2303IETFsv FIFor the most part these dialects and the dialects spoken in Sweden are mutually intelligible although some archaic dialects in Ostrobothnia are practically unintelligible to Swedish speaking people in southern Finland and in Sweden Most Swedish speaking Finns emphasize that Finland Swedish is not a language separate from the Swedish of Sweden The Swedish dialects in Finland are considered varieties of Swedish and the norm for written Standard Swedish is completely applicable also for Finland Swedish Today Swedish dialects are spoken in four different regions in Finland Ostrobothnia Aland Southwest Finland and Uusimaa Swedish as spoken in Finland is regulated by the Swedish Department of the Institute for the Languages of Finland This regulation includes the officially stated aim of keeping Finland Swedish close to the Swedish as spoken in Sweden and strongly phrased advice against loanwords and calques from Finnish which are usually incomprehensible to Swedes It is said that the municipality with the highest proportion of Swedish speakers in the world Larsmo 93 as of 2017 update is located in Finland Korsnas has also been cited as such However as there are no official statistics on the mother tongue of inhabitants of Sweden this is impossible to verify In addition bilingualism is very common for immigrants in Sweden so the term Swedish speaking may be deceptive in that sense In the spoken vernacular especially among young people in Finnish dominated areas Finnish loanwords as well as calques from Finnish are frequently incorporated into Finland Swedish There are also some words in Finland Swedish that would be considered slightly archaic in Sweden Some government and public service terms that have been created in recent centuries also differ The same is true of other new words notably loanwords from English A common misconception among many Swedes is that Finland Swedish is simply Swedish spoken with a Finnish accent something that can be a considerable source of frustration to most native Swedish speakers in Finland weasel words citation needed Any language adopts features especially pronunciation habits from dominant languages it comes in touch with but many of the traits of Finland Swedish exist also in monolingual areas and some are in fact preserved features of Old Swedish as with Scots in comparison with English or Afrikaans in comparison with Dutch Contents 1 History 2 Official status 3 Phonology 4 Vocabulary 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Swedish speaking Finns Officially monolingual Finnish speaking municipalities Bilingual municipalities with Finnish as the majority language Bilingual municipalities with Swedish as the majority language Monolingual Swedish speaking municipalities Aland Sami bilingual municipalities More than 17 000 Swedish speaking Finns live in officially monolingual Finnish municipalities and are thus not represented on the map Finland Swedish was a result of Swedish colonisation of Finland during the Northern Crusades in the 12th to 14th centuries Colonisation focused on Finnish archipelago and some of its coastal regions The colonisation led to the beginning of the Swedish speaking population of Finland 2 3 From the 16th century Swedish was the main language of jurisdiction administration and higher education in Finland which was then a part of Sweden but the majority of the population in the Finnish inland spoke Finnish outside of these sectors of society i e in normal daily life In 1809 when Finland was conquered by the Russian Empire and became an autonomous Grand Duchy Swedish remained the only official language In 1863 both Finnish and Swedish became official languages with equal status and by the time of Finland s independence in 1917 after a Finnicization campaign by the Fennoman movement Finnish clearly dominated in government and society See further Finland s language strife Finland has since then been a bilingual country with a Swedish speaking minority 5 2 of mainland Finland s population in December 2019 living mostly in the coastal areas of southern south western and western Finland During the 20th century the urbanization following the Industrial Revolution has led to large majorities of Finnish speakers in all major cities The capital Helsinki in Swedish Helsingfors became predominantly Finnish speaking as recently as around 1900 A large and important part of the Swedish speaking population nevertheless lives in the capital The autonomous island province of Aland is an exception being monolingually Swedish speaking according to international treaties It is a matter of definition whether the Swedish dialects spoken on Aland are to be considered a kind of Finland Swedish or not Most Swedish speaking Finns and linguists consider them to be closer to some of the dialects spoken in nearby parts of Sweden Official status EditFurther information Languages of Finland Swedish is one of the two official and national languages of the Republic of Finland the other being Finnish These two languages have formally equal status in nearly all legislation though the status of Swedish in Finland has long been a subject of sociopolitical debate 4 5 The other minority languages such as Sami are regulated separately Finland Swedish is regulated by the Institute for the Languages of Finland Official Swedish is not supposed to be very different from Swedish as found in Sweden There are however e g words regarded as archaic in Sweden but commonly used in Finland and terms that differ from their counterparts in Sweden often because of slight differences in the related legislation 6 Bilingualism of municipalities is regulated by the Language Act of 2003 7 If the minority has increased into at least 3 000 persons or 8 of inhabitants then the municipality must become bilingual If the minority has fallen below 3 000 persons and 6 of inhabitants then the municipality becomes monolingual unless it decides to keep its bilingual status At present only one such municipality has done so namely Lohja Lojo in Swedish The status is reviewed once in a decade and enacted by a government decree issued by the Finnish Council of State The country s public broadcaster Yle provides two Swedish language radio stations Yle Vega and Yle X3M The Swedish language TV channel Yle Fem was merged with Yle Teema in 2017 to form Yle Teema amp Fem Phonology Edit Finland Swedish dialects With the exception of the dialects spoken in Ostrobothnia along the west coast close to the Gulf of Bothnia example the dialect spoken in Narpes Finland Swedish is not particularly different from Central Swedish The phoneme ʉː is more centralized and pronounced like ʉː quite similar to how many speakers of English pronounce uː as in moon That should be compared to the Central Swedish ʉ ː which is very close to the short vowel ʏː and is more rounded The highly variable sj sound ɧ varies between ʂ and ɕ ʃ on the Finnish mainland often close to sh in English shoe In the Aland Islands its realization is similar to the velar and often labialized pronunciations of nearby parts of Sweden The historic k sound before front vowels and the tj sound in modern Central Swedish a fricative ɕ is an affricate t ɕ or t ʃ in all Finland Swedish dialects close to ch in English chin except for some 8 Aland Swedish in which it is a simple fricative 9 10 clarification needed The tonal word accent which distinguishes some minimal pairs in most dialects of Swedish and Norwegian is not present in Finland Swedish except around the parish of Snappertuna west of Helsinki Hence Sweden Swedish minimal pairs like ˈandɛn the duck and ˇandɛn the spirit are both pronounced ˈandɛn in Finland Finland Swedish lacks the aspirated stops present in Central Standard Swedish making the contrast between fortis and lenis stops one of voicing only 11 The retroflexion that occurs in many dialects when r precedes a coronal consonant does not occur in certain pairs in Finland Swedish e g rt which is realized as ʈ in Standard Swedish but rt in Finland Swedish 12 Vocabulary EditFinland Swedish mostly has the same vocabulary as Swedish in Sweden and there is a conscious effort to adopt neologisms from Sweden to maintain cohesion between the two varieties Nevertheless there are differences which generally fall into two categories words now considered archaic in Sweden and loanwords and calques from Finnish or independently borrowed from other languages nowadays mostly English There are also some terms differing because of differing legislation See also Edit Languages portal Finland portalLanguages of Finland Aland Swedish Swedish speaking Finns Estonian Swedish Sveticism Sweden SwedishReferences Edit Professor Catherine O Ringen The University of Iowa May 11 2011 Archived from the original on 26 October 2014 Retrieved 27 October 2014 Georg Haggren Petri Halinen Mika Lavento Sami Raninen and Anna Wessman 2015 Muinaisuutemme jaljet Helsinki Gaudeamus pp 420 421 ISBN 9789524953634 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The Era of Swedish Rule 1150 1809 History of Finland Retrieved June 1 2019 Hult F M amp Pietikainen S 2014 Shaping discourses of multilingualism through a language ideological debate The case of Swedish in Finland Journal of Language and Politics 13 1 20 Kolu J Kuronen M amp Palviainen A Eds 2016 Svenskan i Finland 16 Jyvaskyla Studies in Humanities 298 Hallstrom Reijonen Charlotta af Reuter Mikael 2008 Finlandssvensk ordbok in Swedish Helsingfors Schildt amp Forskningscentralen for de inhemska spraken ISBN 978 951 50 1749 9 Kielilaki 6 6 2003 423 Language Act of 2003 Aldre man Brando Har atit salkott swedia ling gu se Retrieved 11 February 2014 Yngre man Brando Brandlarm pa Nordsjon swedia ling gu se Retrieved 11 February 2014 snabbmeny swedia ling gu se Retrieved 11 February 2014 Ringen Catherine Kari Suomi 2012 The voicing contrast in Fenno Swedish stops Journal of Phonetics 40 3 419 429 doi 10 1016 j wocn 2012 02 010 Kuronen Mikko Finns det supradentala konsonanter aven i finlandssvenskan PDF Svenskans beskrivning Hallgren amp Fallgren Retrieved 5 November 2013 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Finland Swedish news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2006 Learn how and when to remove this template message External links EditSweDia a collection of dialect samples of Swedish including Finland Swedish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Finland Swedish amp oldid 1139226564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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