First of May in Finland
The first of May, vappu in Finnish, is nowadays known as the international workers’ day, but long before that it was celebrated in many European cultures in a form or another. In Finland the first of May was known as hela or toukojuhla, and its celebration included burning bonfires, dancing, and sima, a traditional Finnish vappu beverage.
Sima and tippaleipä. Tippaleipä, funnel cake, is a traditional sweet vappu pastry. (Commons)
If you walk on the streets of Helsinki at the first of May, you might notice something peculiar: everyone seems to be wearing a white cap with a black peak. It is the Finnish student cap worn by Finnish high school (lukio) graduates, since vappu is also the day of students. The cap is important for Finns: as a child I was even told that if I wore someone else’s cap, I would never get a cap of my own.
Finns literally keep their caps until they die. (Commons)
Vappu is also a holiday of the Finnish labor. The leftist movement was at its strongest in the early 70s, when the Taistoists, taistolaiset, were popular. The leftist march, vappumarssi, is still arranged every year.
Finnish Communists at Tokoinranta, Helsinki, 2015.
The Taistoist movement set off a wave of leftist music in Finland, and the most popular ones of the songs composed in the 70s are still sung today. You don’t have to be a leftist to listen to them - some former members of the Coalition Party Youth League (the youth league of a Finnish right-wing party) admit singing them while drunk because their own songs weren’t nearly as good.
Laulu siirtotyöläisestä, A Song about a migrant worker, 1970. Composed by Kaj Chydenius, lyrics by Aulikki Oksanen, and sung by Kristiina Halkola.
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the way people online talk about autism is getting really weird, like do they know that neurotypicals still have interests? that someone being passionate about a hobby doesn't mean they're autistic? you guys know that right
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people born in 2000 should be like 12-14 now. but they’re not. that’s how fucked up our world is now
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*gathers all of the people in the world who write the number 7 with a little dash in the center of it so I can study them like little critters and find out what makes them do that*
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Tärkeintä täs on se vika kirjain/ihan sanan loppu. Jos sun murre muuttaa jotain sanan keskeltä, niin niillä ei tässä oo väliä (mut voit toki kertoo tageissa tms.) Mua kiinnostaa nyt se, et onko siellä lopussa kirjakielessä sanaan kuuluva n-kirjain vai ei. Ja pliis kerro myös niin tarkasti kuin somessa haluat et mistä päin Suomea oot! Jos siis vaan ok niin kerro jopa kaupunki (tai lähin kaupunki) yritän selvittää täs jotain todella spesifiä :D
Muita esimerkkejä
Juoksemaan -> juokseen vai juoksee
Nukkumaan -> nukkuun vai nukkuu
Katsomaan -> katsoon/kattoon vai katsoo/kattoo
Esimerkkilause: Hän jäi kalliolle itkemään -> jäi itkeen vai jäi itkee.
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the problem isn't just that media literacy is slowly becoming a dying art. it's that people straight up do not pay attention when they watch tv/film anymore.
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i want so badly to be more offline but alas the siren call of images
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