jokin

See also: jokin'

Finnish

Alternative forms

  • jk (abbreviation, chiefly in dictionaries)

Etymology

Pronoun stem jo- (see joka) + enclitic particle -kin.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈjokin/, [ˈjo̞kin]

Pronoun

jokin (stem jo-)

  1. (indefinite) something.
  2. (indefinite, adjectival) some, one, a.
  3. what have you, what-have-you, whathaveyou
    Nyt tarvittaisiin vasara tai jotain.
    Now we would need a hammer or what have you.

Usage notes

  • In colloquial Finnish, the paradigms of jokin (used of non-human referents in the standard language) and joku (for human referents) have merged. Thus, colloquially, the word joku is used for the nominative singular and its plural form jotkut is used for the nominative plural when referring to both human and non-human referents, but for all other case categories, the forms originating in the paradigm of jokin (above) are used. This leads to the following pairs in colloquial usage:
    joku mies / jollekin miehelle
    some man / to some man
    joku pöytä / jollekin pöydälle
    some table / onto some table
    and the following pairs in formal usage according to the standard language:
    joku mies / jollekulle miehelle
    (meanings as above)
    jokin pöytä / jollekin pöydälle
    (meanings as above)

Declension

Case suffixes are regular; only the first part jo- is declined, the enclitic particle -kin doesn't change its form. Some cases have parallel forms without the k. The instructive and abessive cases are extremely rarely or never used. The sublative, lative and causative forms are used as adverbs.

Derived terms

Pronouns with same stems:

See also

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.