Thanks and bye bye
It means the Gold of Lapland :)
If you want to say goodbye to someone, don't use 'nice'. And don't say both finnish words (example hyvästi and näkemiin use only one of them).Nice = Kiva, HyväGoodbye = Hyvästi, näkemiinLetters are pronounced differently (this means how you say it in finnish perspective. This is not a translationÄ is equal as the a-letter in cat. (Khät)K is the same as the c in cat. (Khät)A is the same as the a in abort. (Abort)Y is pronounced as is the last part of the u of fuse. (Fiyys or Fiys)I is same as is the e in equal. (Iqual)
It is finnish phrase for 'F*ck you'
It swedish and means "better people". It's used to pejoratively describe the swedofinns as being smug and feeling better than the Fins because they speak Swedish. It comes from the expression svensktallande, bättre folk (Swedishspeakers, better people)
"About 1850" and "around 1850" are meanings of the English phrase "ca 1850." The two letters serve as an abbreviation for circa, a Latin word which translates into English in the two above-mentioned ways.
'The evening news' is Finnish is 'iltauutiset'.
Rakkaasi
'Seven days' in Finnish is 'seitsemän päivää'.
vyöpuukko
"[I] love you"
'Better people' litteraly in Finnish is 'Paremmat ihmiset'.
Lapin kulta
(a) Grazy reindeer.
Komea mies
Good Night.
"what's up"
seven days