Home

taivuttavat

Taivuttavat is a Finnish verb form that denotes “they bend” or “they persuade.” It is the third-person plural present indicative of the verb taivuttaa, which has two core senses: physical bending or shaping, and figurative persuading or coaxing.

In the physical sense, taivuttavat is used when a plural subject causes a material to bend or

In a figurative sense, taivuttavat can mean to persuade or influence someone to adopt a position or

Grammar and related forms: taivuttavat is finite, present tense, third person plural form of taivuttaa. Related

Etymology: taivuttavat derives from taivuttaa, with taivut- as the root, and the standard Finnish verb conjugation

curve.
For
example,
koneet
taivuttavat
levyjä
puristimella
means
“the
machines
bend
sheets
with
a
press.”
In
this
sense
the
verb
often
appears
with
objects
such
as
levyjä
(sheets),
rautaa
(iron),
or
muovia
(plastic).
condition.
For
example,
Myyntitiimi
taivuttaa
asiakkaat
hyväksymään
ehdon
translates
to
“the
sales
team
persuades
the
customers
to
accept
the
condition.”
This
usage
is
common
in
business
or
rhetorical
contexts.
forms
include
taivuttaa
(infinitive,
“to
bend”
or
“to
persuade”),
taivutti
(past
singular,
“bent”
or
“persuaded”),
taivuttivat
(past
plural),
and
taivuttaminen
(gerund/infinitive
noun
“bending”
or
“inflection”).
The
present
active
participle
is
taivuttava,
meaning
“bending”
or
“bendable,”
and
taivutus
is
a
noun
meaning
both
“bending”
and,
in
linguistics,
“inflection.”
suffix
-vat
indicating
3rd-person
plural
present.
The
root
also
yields
taivutus,
a
common
term
for
physical
bending
as
well
as
grammatical
inflection.