Home

kehään

Kehän is the genitive singular form of the Finnish noun kehä, which means ring, circle or circular band. As a grammatical form, kehän is used to indicate possession or a relationship to the ring or circular object, for example kehän pituus (the circumference of the circle) or a description such as kehässä oleva väri (the color of the ring). The same form also appears in compound expressions where the ring or circular feature is the reference point.

In geometry and mathematics, kehän pituus refers to the circumference, the distance around a circle. The circumference

In Finnish urban planning and transportation terminology, kehä commonly denotes a beltway or ring road around

Grammatical note: Kehä is a regular Finnish noun, and kehän is its genitive singular form. This form

is
commonly
expressed
by
formulas
such
as
C
=
2πr
or
C
=
πd,
where
r
is
the
radius
and
d
is
the
diameter.
The
term
ympärysmitta
is
another
Finnish
word
used
for
circumference,
and
kehän
pituus
may
be
used
interchangeably
in
many
contexts.
a
city.
The
Helsinki
area
famously
uses
Kehä
I,
Kehä
II
and
Kehä
III
to
describe
three
concentric
ring
roads
that
connect
suburbs
and
relieve
city-center
traffic.
The
concept
of
a
kehä
can
be
applied
to
other
metropolitan
areas
as
well,
referring
to
similar
ring-shaped
road
systems
or
corridors.
appears
in
phrases
describing
the
circle
or
ring,
its
properties,
or
its
relation
to
other
objects.