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inessiivistä

Inessiivistä is a linguistic term used in Finnish grammar to refer to the inessive case in discussions of location and inside-ness. The inessive expresses a location inside something, for example being inside a place or object. In regular usage, the term inessive is used to describe how a noun or pronoun changes form to indicate “in/inside.”

The inessive has specific suffixes that attach to the word stem. In singular, the common endings are

- talo (house) becomes talossa (in the house) in singular, and taloissa (in the houses) in plural.

- järvi (lake) becomes järvessä (in the lake) in singular, and järvissä (in the lakes) in plural.

- koulu (school) becomes koulussa (in the school) in singular, and kouluissa (in the schools) in plural.

The inessive contrasts with other locative cases. The adessive marks location on a surface (on the table:

Inesiivistä commonly appears in grammars and linguistic discussions as the name of the case being described,

-ssa
or
-ssä,
depending
on
vowel
harmony.
In
plural,
the
endings
are
-issa
or
-issä.
For
example:
pöytällä),
the
illative
indicates
movement
into
(into
the
house:
taloon),
and
the
elative
expresses
movement
out
from
inside
(from
the
house:
talosta).
These
cases
form
part
of
Finnish
noun
inflection
and
interact
with
vowel
harmony
and
consonant
alternations.
and
it
may
also
appear
in
partitive
constructions
when
the
case
term
is
itself
being
discussed
in
text.
Overall,
the
inessive
provides
a
precise
means
to
convey
“inside”
a
space
within
Finnish
syntax.