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Summary
Helsinki slang or stadin slangi ("Helsinki's slang", from Swedish stad, "city"see etymology) is a...
Content
Helsinki slang or stadin slangi ("Helsinki's slang", from Swedish stad, "city"see etymology) is a local dialect, a sociolect and a variation of the Finnish language mainly used in the capital Helsinki. It is characterized by its abundance of foreign loan words not found in the other Finnish dialects.
Helsinki slang first evolved in the late 19th century as a sociolect of the multilingual Helsinki working class communities, where Swedish and Finnish speaking youth lived together with Russian, German and various other language minorities.
Grammatically Helsinki slang is based on colloquial Finnish. It is characterized by a large number of words borrowed from originally Swedish, German and Russian – and nowadays chiefly English – vocabularies, replacing common everyday nouns, verbs and adjectives with loanwords, that are inflected according to the grammatical rules of spoken Finnish.
The language's history can be divided into the old slang (vanha slangi) and the new or modern slang (uusi slangi). Old slang was common in Helsinki up to the mid-20th century and is thicker and harder to understand for an outsider of the group – even to one who is fluent in modern slang – because it has a
Created by:
Freebase Data Team
Oct 23, 2006
Last edited by:
Freebase Data Team
Oct 23, 2006
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