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elimistöön

Elimistöön is the illative case form of the Finnish noun elimistö, which refers to the organism’s body or to the body’s organ systems as a whole. The illative form indicates direction toward or into something, so elimistöön means “into the body” or “to the organism” in English. In scientific and medical contexts, elimistöön is commonly used to describe processes where substances enter or move within the organism.

Morphologically, elimistöön is formed by adding the illative suffix -öön to the noun elimistö. This pattern

Usage and context do not differ in principle from other illative forms: elimistöön is used to express

Examples:

- Ravintoaineet imeytyvät elimistöön. (Nutrients are absorbed into the body.)

- Lääkeaine pääsee elimistöön verenkierron kautta. (The drug enters the body through the circulatory system.)

- Infektio voi siirtyä elimistöön kudoshakkeen kautta. (An infection can spread into the body through tissue pathways.)

Elimistöön is a technical term appropriate for biomedical and academic Finnish, and it is paired with the

is
typical
for
many
Finnish
nouns
that
end
with
a
stem
ending
in
ö,
producing
the
familiar
illative
ending
-öön
in
singular
usage.
destination
or
entry
into
the
organism.
It
appears
in
pharmacological,
nutritional,
and
physiological
descriptions,
as
well
as
in
clinical
or
research
writing.
more
general
elimistö
to
discuss
bodily
systems
and
their
functions.