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kävelet

Kävelet is a Finnish verb form meaning "you walk" or "you are walking." It is the second-person singular present indicative form of the verb kävellä, which means to walk. The infinitive form is kävellä. In Finnish, verb endings indicate person and number, so the ending -t marks the second person singular.

Usage and conjugation: The present indicative forms of kävellä include minä kävelen, sinä kävelet, hän kävelee,

Examples: "Sinä kävelet kotiin joka päivä" translates to "You walk home every day." "Käveletko minun kanssani?"

Related forms: Kävellä (to walk), kävely (a walk or the act of walking), kävelijä (walker). Finnish verbs

me
kävelemme,
te
kävelette,
he
kävelevät.
Kävelet
is
used
when
speaking
to
one
person
in
informal
speech.
The
stem
is
kävel-,
and
the
suffix
-t
signals
the
second
person
singular.
The
verb
is
regular
in
the
present
tense
and
participates
in
standard
tense
constructions
like
other
Finnish
verbs.
means
"Are
you
walking
with
me?"
The
form
can
express
both
habitual
action
and
a
current
activity,
depending
on
context
and
accompanying
adverbs
or
temporal
phrases.
also
form
past
tenses
and
perfect
constructions
with
auxiliary
verbs
or
participles,
for
example
"käveli"
(walked)
and
"on
kävellyt"
(has
walked),
illustrating
how
kävelet
fits
into
broader
verb
morphology.