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Elimistö

Elimistä is a Finnish noun form that functions as the elative plural of the word elin, meaning an organ or body part. In grammatical terms, -stä/-stä marks the elative case in plural, so elimistä translates roughly to “from the organs” and is used to indicate origin or source in reference to more than one organ.

The usual context for elimistä is scientific and medical language. It appears in descriptions of origins, materials,

Relation to other forms is straightforward: the singular nominative is elin (an organ), the plural nominative

In summary, elimistä is a specialized grammatical form used to denote origin or association with multiple organs,

or
components
related
to
organs,
for
example
in
phrases
like
elimistä
peräisin
olevat
yhdisteet
(substances
originating
from
the
organs)
or
elimistä
erittyvät
eritteet
(secretions
discharged
from
the
organs).
Because
of
its
technical
character,
elimistä
is
more
common
in
biological,
anatomical,
or
physiological
writing
than
in
everyday
Finnish.
is
elimet
(organs),
the
genitive
plural
is
elinten,
and
other
case
forms
follow
standard
Finnish
noun
declension.
The
term
should
not
be
confused
with
elimistö,
which
refers
to
the
organ
systems
of
an
organism
as
a
whole,
rather
than
to
specific
organs
or
their
origins.
primarily
within
technical
texts
dealing
with
anatomy
or
physiology.
It
illustrates
how
Finnish
uses
the
elative
case
to
express
source
from
a
plural
noun.