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kuolemaa

Kuolemaa is the partitive singular form of the Finnish noun kuolema, which means death. In Finnish, the partitive case is often used for indefinite objects or after verbs and negations, so kuolemaa commonly appears in contexts where death is not presented as a definite object. Examples include pelätä kuolemaa, meaning “to fear death,” and kuolemaa aiheuttavia riskejä, meaning “death-causing risks.” The base form kuolema is a neuter noun and is widely used in medical, philosophical, and everyday language to discuss mortality.

Origin and related forms: Kuolema stems from the verb kuolla, “to die,” forming an abstract noun for

Usage and cultural context: In Finnish discourse, kuolema and its inflected forms are common across medical,

the
concept
of
dying.
The
partitive
singular
form
kuolemaa
contrasts
with
the
genitive
form
kuoleman
(as
in
kuoleman
pelko,
“fear
of
death”).
In
compound
terms,
kuolema
appears
in
words
such
as
kuolemantuomio,
meaning
“death
sentence,”
and
kuolemantuottamus,
meaning
“death
by
negligence.”
legal,
ethical,
and
literary
domains.
Finnish
treats
death
as
a
neutral
physiological
and
existential
category,
though
the
surrounding
language
can
convey
emotion
depending
on
context.
The
term
also
features
in
idioms
and
religious
or
cultural
expressions
related
to
mortality
and
the
afterlife.