Finnish is unusual: like Hungarian and Estonian, it's a Uralic language — not related to the Indo-European languages of Scandinavia surrounding it. Around 5 million people speak Finnish, mostly in Finland. The Finnish-American community is concentrated in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, Minnesota, Massachusetts, and parts of Washington state — descendants of late-19th and early-20th-century mining-era immigration. Our Finnish translation work is genealogy-heavy (birth and church records for descendants tracing Finnish lineage), plus the occasional business contract tied to Finnish technology and forestry sectors. Finnish uses the Latin alphabet with distinctive umlauted letters.