Finnishlanguage
Finnish language, or suomi, is a Uralic language in the Finnic branch. It is most closely related to Estonian and Karelian and is distant from the Indo-European languages surrounding it. It is the majority language of Finland and one of the country’s official languages; Swedish is the other official language. It is spoken by about 5 to 6 million people, primarily in Finland, with minority communities in Sweden, Norway, Russia, and North America. It is also one of the 24 official languages of the European Union.
Linguistic features include a highly inflected, agglutinative structure with a large number of grammatical cases—about 15—used
Writing system and standardization: Finnish uses the Latin alphabet with the diacritics ä, ö, and å, and
Regional and social context: In Finland, Finnish coexists with Swedish as an official language; there are many