1,000 in Finnish
1,000 in Other Languages
About 1,000 in Finnish
To say 1,000 in Finnish, you use tuhat. The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is tuhannes.
1,000 is an even number. Being able to recognize and say 1,000 in Finnish pays off quickly — numbers like this appear in prices, schedules, addresses, and introductions.
Numbers such as 1,000 are foundational to Finnish fluency. Once you can confidently hear and produce numbers in real conversations, a huge range of everyday interactions become accessible.
Learning Numbers in Finnish
What makes Finnish numbers challenging
Finnish numbers decline through 15 grammatical cases, creating a staggering number of possible forms for each number. Even simple digits like seitsemän (7) and kahdeksan (8) have three and four syllables respectively, making digit-by-digit phone dictation noticeably longer than in most languages. The agglutinative suffixes stack up for larger numbers, and the case endings can change both the middle and end of a number word. Understanding spoken Finnish numbers requires recognizing the root digit through layers of suffixes.
Tips for learning Finnish numbers
Focus on the nominative (basic) forms of digits 0-9 first — these are what you will hear in phone numbers and prices. Finnish numbers are logical once you understand the suffix system, so learn the pattern rather than memorizing each form. Practice recognizing the longer digit names (seitsemän, kahdeksan, yhdeksän) at speed. For everyday listening, basic nominative forms cover most situations.