Home

taivuttivat

Taivuttivat is the third-person plural imperfect form of the Finnish verb taivuttaa. It is used for both a literal, physical bending and a figurative sense in which someone twists or persuades another, depending on the context. In a sentence, taivuttivat generally translates as “they bent” or “they persuaded/brought someone to do something.”

Morphology and usage

Taivuttaa is a Finnish transitively used verb. The infinitive is taivuttaa, and the stem for past tense

The physical sense commonly involves bending or shaping objects, for example: He taivuttivat oksia puusta (They

See also and related forms

Taivuttaa has a range of related forms, including taivuttaminen (the act of bending or persuading) and taivuttava

forms
is
taivutt-.
The
third-person
plural
imperfect
is
taivuttivat,
formed
with
the
stem
taivutt-
plus
the
imperfect
marker
-ivat.
This
form
appears
in
narrative
past
contexts
referring
to
multiple
subjects
performing
the
action.
bent
the
branches
from
the
tree).
The
figurative
sense
involves
influencing
a
person
or
their
will,
for
instance:
He
taivuttiivat
hänen
tahtonsa
(They
bent
his
will)
or
He
taivuttivat
hänet
tekemään
sen
(They
persuaded
him
to
do
it).
The
exact
meaning
hinges
on
the
object
and
the
surrounding
context.
(bendable,
capable
of
being
bent).
The
nuance
between
physical
bending
and
figurative
persuasion
is
a
key
feature
of
taivuttava
usage
and
is
determined
by
the
direct
object
and
context.