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Tilalle

Tilalle is a Finnish linguistic term referring to the allative form of the noun tila, used to express substitution or replacement. In practice, tilalle means “in place of” or “instead of” and is deployed when describing one thing taking the place of another. The construction is common in written language and can appear in formal explanations, instructions, and reports.

In use, tilalle appears with verbs of replacement or rearrangement, such as vaihtaa (to replace), asettaa (to

Etymologically, tilalle is the allative form of tila, reflecting a sense of direction toward a place or

Related terms in Finnish include sen sijaan and sijaan, which can also express substitution or contrast, though

place
in
substitution),
or
korvata
(to
substitute).
The
typical
word
order
is
X
tilalle
Y,
meaning
“Y
in
place
of
X.”
For
example:
Hän
vaihtoi
vanhan
kellon
tilalle
uuden.
Translation:
He
replaced
the
old
watch
with
a
new
one.
Another
example:
Yritys
otti
tilalle
uuden
strategian.
Translation:
The
company
adopted
a
new
strategy
in
place
of
the
old
one.
position
of
substitution.
It
is
distinct
from
phrases
that
use
sen
sijaan
or
sen
tilalle
in
more
idiomatic
expressions,
which
convey
a
similar
idea
with
different
nuance.
with
slightly
different
emphasis.
Cross-linguistically,
English
uses
phrases
like
in
place
of
or
in
lieu
of
to
convey
the
same
idea.
Tilalle
provides
a
concise,
grammatically
integrated
way
to
describe
replacements
in
Finnish.