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kävelit

Kävelit is a grammatical form in Finnish. It is the second-person singular past tense (imperfect) of the verb kävellä, which means "to walk." The form represents a completed walking action referring to the person addressed, or to a situation where the subject you is understood from context. In English it corresponds to "you walked."

Morphology and conjugation details: The lemma is kävellä. The stem for the imperfect is kävel-, and the

Usage notes: Kävelit is used to describe a past walking action by the person addressed. It is

Examples:

- Eilen kävelit kaupungin läpi. (Yesterday you walked through the city.)

- Kun sinä kävelit, aurinko paistoi. (While you walked, the sun was shining.)

See also: kävellä, Finnish verb conjugation patterns.

past
tense
endings
are
person
and
number
specific:
minä
kävelin
(I
walked),
sinä
kävelit
(you
walked),
hän
käveli
(he/she
walked),
me
kävelimme
(we
walked),
te
kävelitte
(you
all
walked),
he
kävelivät
(they
walked).
The
infinitive
is
kävellä,
and
the
present
tense
forms
include
kävelet
(you
walk)
and
kävelee
(he/she
walks).
Finnish
verbs
typically
omit
the
subject
pronoun,
so
kävelit
often
appears
without
explicit
"you"
in
sentences
where
the
subject
is
clear.
part
of
a
regular
verb
conjugation
pattern
and
is
common
in
narration,
dialogue,
and
responses
to
questions
about
past
activities.
Because
Finnish
often
drops
subject
pronouns,
the
agent
is
frequently
inferred
from
context
rather
than
stated.