Thread 212752498 - /int/ [Archived: 407 hours ago]

Anonymous Serbia
7/14/2025, 2:06:35 PM No.212752498
Flag_of_Finland.svg
Flag_of_Finland.svg
md5: 286cc757dcb798352f31341569dcfb82🔍
>they are forced to learn language of 5% minority
cucks
Anonymous Canada
7/14/2025, 2:08:10 PM No.212752552
Actually, learning one of the official languages enriches is one's own vocabulary, and opens up many doors of opportunities within the job market.
Anonymous Finland
7/14/2025, 2:08:26 PM No.212752559
Its even worse than that
They force you to learn the language of the 90% slant eyed uralic gook majority
Replies: >>212752609
Anonymous Serbia
7/14/2025, 2:10:24 PM No.212752609
>>212752559
YWNBAS
Anonymous Finland
7/14/2025, 2:11:03 PM No.212752627
https://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taksv%C3%A4rkki?useskin=vector

>The word taksvärkki (from Swedish dagsverke, “day's work”) originally referred to a work obligation of tenant farmers (torpparit and mäkitupalaiset) in Finland. They were required to work for the landlord a certain number of days per week—or provide a worker in their stead—in place of (or alongside) paying rent in cash. These workdays were informally called taksvärkkipäivät. The practice faded in the early 1900s with the decline of tenant farming and reforms such as the Torppar Act.
Anonymous Finland
7/14/2025, 2:14:06 PM No.212752711
>Swedish was the sole official language in government, administration, and legal matters.
>All official records, court proceedings, and bureaucratic documents were in Swedish.
>Universities and schools used Swedish as the language of instruction.
>The Royal Academy of Turku (established in 1640, later the University of Helsinki) taught exclusively in Swedish.
>Finnish was considered a peasant language and not suitable for scholarly or formal use.
>The elite and upper classes in Finland were predominantly Swedish-speaking or strongly aligned with Swedish culture.
>Many Finnish intellectuals and nationalists (e.g., Johan Ludvig Runeberg) initially wrote in Swedish.
>Finnish had no official status and was not used in formal education, government, or public life.
>Early Finnish-language literature and promotion efforts were limited and often informal or religious in nature (e.g., Mikael Agricola’s translation of the New Testament in the 1500s).
>Fluency in Swedish was often a prerequisite for social mobility, access to education, and positions of power.
Replies: >>212753376
Anonymous Italy
7/14/2025, 2:40:47 PM No.212753376
>>212752711
if it weren't the swedes you would've been under russhit rule