English and Finnish are unrelated. English belongs to the Indo-European family of languages and Finnish belongs to the Uralic family.
It's most closely related to Estonian.Estonian, and Saami (Lapp)estonian
Maybe Estonian
Yes, the English Setter is closely related to the Irish Setter.
Helki is not Finnish
Aino Wuolle has written: 'English Finnish (englantilais-suomalainen) Dictionary' 'Suomalais-englantilainen sanakirja' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Finnish language, English 'Suomalais-englantilainen opiskelusanakirja' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Finnish language, English 'Suomalais-Englantilais-Suomalainen Sanakirja' 'Finnish-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Finnish language, English, English language, Finnish 'Finnish-English/English-Finnish Dictionary (Hippocrene Concise)' 'Suomi englanti suomi' -- subject(s): English language, Dictionaries, Finnish language, Finnish, English 'Suomalais-englantilainen koulusanakirja' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Finnish language, English
The Finnish word voodoo means voodoo in English.
The easiest language for English speakers to learn tends to be languages that share similarities in grammar and vocabulary. For English speakers, Spanish, French, and Dutch are often considered relatively easier languages to learn due to their similarities in vocabulary and sentence structure.
Bowling
'Lapplander' in Finnish is 'lappalainen'.
The Kokoomus is the Finnish National Coalition Party.
The English translation of the Finnish word "bussiakatauklut" is "Bus Schedules." You can translate more words from Finnish to English at the Google Translate website.
Yes, the English Setter is closely related to the Irish Setter.