Sallittuun
Sallittuun is a Finnish grammatical form, specifically the illative singular form of the adjective sallittu, which means allowed or permitted. In Finnish, adjectives agree with the nouns they modify in number and case, and when the noun is in the illative case (often translated as “to” or “toward” something), the corresponding adjective form also takes an illative ending. Thus sallittuun appears in phrases where both the noun and the modified concept are directed toward a destination described as permitted.
Etymology and function: sallittuun derives from the participial adjective sallittu, which comes from the verb sallita,
Usage notes: Sallittuun is used when an illative noun phrase requires an adjective that conveys permission
See also: Finnish grammar, illative case, adjective declension, permissive terminology.
Limitations: Sallittuun is a grammatical form rather than a standalone lexical entry with a separate meaning.