sanaluokkatarkenne
Sanaluokkatarkenne is a term used in Finnish linguistics that refers to morphological markers indicating a word’s part of speech. Unlike languages that employ overt word order or inflection to distinguish nouns, verbs, adjectives, and other categories, Finnish relies on specific endings that attach to root words to signal grammatical function. The suffixes that play this role—such as -a, -ä for nominalization or -lla / -llä for adverbial formation—serve as sanaluokkatarkenteita, thereby providing syntactic information directly at the morpheme level.
The concept originates from nineteenth‑century comparative linguistics, when scholars sought systematic ways to describe Finno‑Ugric morphology.
Typical examples include the noun‑forming suffix -huone (forming nouns from verbs) and the verb‑forming -tetta‑ (deriving
Sanaluokkatarkenteita are essential for Finnish syntax parsing in computational linguistics as well. Automatic taggers use these