

BA Finnish and French
About this course
Finnish and French is an intellectually distinctive pairing that brings together two European languages from entirely different linguistic families. Finnish belongs to the Finno-Ugric group, making it structurally unlike almost all other European languages, and studying it provides both a fascinating linguistic challenge and access to a Nordic culture with an extraordinary record in education, design, and environmental policy. French is one of the world's most widely spoken languages, a major medium of international diplomacy, business, and culture, and the language of an enormous literary and philosophical tradition stretching across France, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada, and much of Africa. At University College London, this four-year degree develops genuine linguistic competence in both languages alongside deep engagement with their associated cultures and histories. In the Finnish strand, you will work through the grammar of a language whose structure and vocabulary are quite unlike the Indo-European languages familiar to most British students, engaging with Finnish literature, history, and culture as your proficiency develops. In the French strand, you will study literature, film, and cultural history from France and the broader Francophone world, while developing your spoken and written French to a high level. UCL's School of European Languages, Culture and Society has research expertise across both language areas, and the four-year structure gives you sufficient time to develop real proficiency in both. Graduates with both Finnish and French have skills that are genuinely unusual and valued across a range of professional contexts. Roles in translation and interpreting, in international organisations and businesses, and in the diplomatic service draw on the linguistic range of this degree. The French component opens particularly wide career options given the global reach of the language, while Finnish expertise is distinctive and specifically valuable in contexts involving Nordic affairs, EU policy, or Nordic design and technology companies. Academic research in Finno-Ugric linguistics, Scandinavian studies, or Francophone cultural studies are further pathways, and some graduates continue to postgraduate study in one or both of the language areas.
Syllabus & Modules
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