There is a Finnish word that has 9 consecutive vowels. It's "Hääyöaieuutinen", it means "Plans for the wedding night", and yes, you have to pronounce all of those vowels.
@Fish_Fin Finnish is on the Uralic language tree. while nordic languages are from the indo european language tree. so it is no wonder why it sound so different.
@BrainHigh Yeap... I once asked from a Swedish person that does he want to have a grammar competition that which one has more difficult language. He said "No, if there is one thing we can't beat the Finns in it is the language" Germanic languages kinda pale on comparison to riches of Uralic ones.
@historyGeek Yes. These are vowels in Finnish language: A, E, I, U, O, Y, Ö and Ä. Most of the keyboards in Finland however also include Swedish Å although as far as I can remember that letter is NOT used in any Finnish word if somebody knows a word in Finnish language uses that letter then you can just dismiss what I have written about it what comes on Finnish language. Reason why it is there is because of the Swedish population in Finland, secondary government and one of the three customer support language is Swedish and it is taught in schools.
@Fish_Fin There's a reason we name Å as "Swedish O"... if it appears in a Finnish text, it's most likely in someone's name or the text is talking about Swedish language.
@Suominoita But officially we don't have words which include letter Å. I can see in those situations it appearing but if we are specifically talking about is it being used on the language outside of names? I can't come up with any words that do use Å. Although the case you represented is definitely something I agree on that. Yes. There it does appear.
@historyGeek Yes, it's like French 'U' or German 'Ü'. A very similar sound to English 'U', but it's a "Front" vowel sound rather than a "Back" or "Central" vowel sound. So, it's kind of like if you tried to pronounce the 'Ih' sound and 'U' sound at the same time (That might not be the best explanation, but it's how I learned to pronounce it)