/ˈhei̯næ/, [ˈhe̞i̯næ]
OriginFrom Proto-Finnic *haina, borrowed from Proto-Balto-Slavic *śaina- (compare Lithuanian šienas, Proto-Slavic *sěno).
- hay (grass cut and dried for use as animal fodder)
“tehdä heinää” — to hay, to make hay, to do hay
- grass (any plant of the family Poaceae, or any of the various plants resembling grasses but not in the family, such as sedges)
- abbreviation, alt-of, clippingclipping of heinäkuu (“July”)
- essive, form-of, pluralessive plural of he (“he (Semitic letter)”)
- essive, form-of, pluralessive plural of he
“Heinä minä olisin hiljaa.” — If I were they, I would keep my mouth shut.
Formsheinä(nominative, singular) · heinät(nominative, plural) · heinä(accusative, nominative, singular) · heinät(accusative, nominative, plural) · heinän(accusative, genitive, singular) · heinät(accusative, genitive, plural) · heinän(genitive, singular) · heinien(genitive, plural) · heinäin(genitive, plural, rare) · heinää(partitive, singular) · heiniä(partitive, plural) · heinässä(inessive, singular) · heinissä(inessive, plural) · heinästä(elative, singular) · heinistä(elative, plural) · heinään(illative, singular) · heiniin(illative, plural) · heinällä(adessive, singular) · heinillä(adessive, plural) · heinältä(ablative, singular)