المعنى
Clean outdoor air.
خلفية ثقافية
Lithuanians believe that sleeping with a window slightly open, even in winter, is essential for health. This is called 'vėdinimas'. Sanatoriums in Druskininkai often have 'air therapy' where patients sit in pine forests to breathe the 'grynas oras'. It is common for parents to leave babies in strollers outside (in a yard or balcony) to nap in the fresh air, even in sub-zero temperatures. The 'sodyba' culture is centered around escaping the city's 'heavy' air for the 'grynas oras' of the countryside.
The 'Reikia' Rule
90% of the time you use this phrase, you'll be saying you need it. Just memorize 'Man reikia gryno oro' as a single block.
Compliment the Air
If you visit someone's country house, complimenting the 'grynas oras' is as common as complimenting the food.
المعنى
Clean outdoor air.
The 'Reikia' Rule
90% of the time you use this phrase, you'll be saying you need it. Just memorize 'Man reikia gryno oro' as a single block.
Compliment the Air
If you visit someone's country house, complimenting the 'grynas oras' is as common as complimenting the food.
Oras vs. Oras
Remember 'oras' is both air and weather. Context is king!
اختبر نفسك
Fill in the correct form of 'grynas oras'.
Man reikia ______ (grynas oras).
The verb 'reikia' requires the genitive case.
Match the phrase to the situation.
You are in a forest and want to comment on the air quality.
This is the natural way to praise the air in nature.
Which sentence is grammatically correct?
Where are the children playing?
The locative case 'gryname ore' is used for location.
Complete the dialogue.
A: Kodėl atidarei langą? B: Nes kambaryje trūksta ______.
The verb 'trūksta' (lacks) requires the genitive case.
🎉 النتيجة: /4
وسائل تعلم بصرية
Where to find Grynas Oras
Nature
- • Miškas
- • Pajūris
- • Kaimas
Home
- • Balkonas
- • Atidarytas langas
- • Sodas
بنك التمارين
4 تمارينMan reikia ______ (grynas oras).
The verb 'reikia' requires the genitive case.
You are in a forest and want to comment on the air quality.
This is the natural way to praise the air in nature.
Where are the children playing?
The locative case 'gryname ore' is used for location.
A: Kodėl atidarei langą? B: Nes kambaryje trūksta ______.
The verb 'trūksta' (lacks) requires the genitive case.
🎉 النتيجة: /4
الأسئلة الشائعة
10 أسئلةNo, Lithuanians usually distinguish between 'kondicionierius' and 'grynas oras'. Fresh air implies it comes from outside.
They are both very common, but 'grynas oras' sounds slightly more 'healthy' and 'natural'.
You say: 'Einu į gryną orą' or 'Einu į lauką prasivėdinti'.
No, 'grynas' means 'pure'. You can have 'grynas vanduo' (pure water) or 'gryni pinigai' (cash/pure money).
That is the genitive case, used after verbs like 'reikia' (need) or 'noriu' (want).
Yes! Lithuanians love 'grynas oras' even when it is -20°C.
Only figuratively, like 'He is a breath of fresh air' (Jis kaip gryno oro gurkšnis).
The opposite is 'užterštas oras' (polluted air) or 'tvankus oras' (stuffy air).
It is neutral. You can use it with your boss or your grandmother.
No, unless it's at the start of a sentence.
عبارات ذات صلة
Šviežias oras
synonymFresh air
Gryno oro gurkšnis
specialized formA breath of fresh air
Gryna tiesa
builds onThe pure truth
Lauko oras
similarOutdoor air