A1 Idiom Informell

Turēt īkšķus

To hold thumbs

Bedeutung

To wish someone good luck.

🌍

Kultureller Hintergrund

Latvians often tuck their thumbs inside their fists when they say this. It's a physical manifestation of the idiom. In Estonia and Lithuania, similar thumb-based idioms exist, showing a regional linguistic bond that excludes the finger-crossing of the West. Some Latvians believe you shouldn't tell someone 'Good luck' directly because it might attract bad spirits; 'turēt īkšķus' is a safer, indirect way to wish success. On Latvian social media, the 'thumbs up' emoji is often interpreted as 'holding thumbs' rather than just 'OK' or 'Like' in high-stress contexts.

💡

Use the Future Tense

Most often, you'll say 'Es turēšu īkšķus' because you are promising to wish luck for an upcoming event.

⚠️

Avoid 'Krustot'

Never say 'krustot pirkstus' unless you are literally talking about crossing fingers for a different reason.

Bedeutung

To wish someone good luck.

💡

Use the Future Tense

Most often, you'll say 'Es turēšu īkšķus' because you are promising to wish luck for an upcoming event.

⚠️

Avoid 'Krustot'

Never say 'krustot pirkstus' unless you are literally talking about crossing fingers for a different reason.

💬

The Gesture

If you want to look like a local, actually tuck your thumb into your fist while saying the phrase.

Teste dich selbst

Fill in the correct form of the verb 'turēt' in the future tense.

Es rīt ______ īkšķus par tavu interviju.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: turēšu

Since the event is tomorrow (rīt), the future tense 'turēšu' is required.

Which preposition is used with 'turēt īkšķus'?

Mēs turam īkšķus ___ tevi.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: par

The idiom 'turēt īkšķus' always takes the preposition 'par' to indicate the person being supported.

Match the Latvian phrase with its English meaning.

Match the following:

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: all

These are the standard translations for these related luck-based idioms.

Complete the dialogue.

Anna: 'Man šodien ir svarīga prezentācija.' Juris: '_________________'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Turu īkšķus!

'Turu īkšķus!' is the most appropriate response to someone facing a stressful event.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Aufgabensammlung

4 Aufgaben
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'turēt' in the future tense. Fill Blank A1

Es rīt ______ īkšķus par tavu interviju.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: turēšu

Since the event is tomorrow (rīt), the future tense 'turēšu' is required.

Which preposition is used with 'turēt īkšķus'? Choose A1

Mēs turam īkšķus ___ tevi.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: par

The idiom 'turēt īkšķus' always takes the preposition 'par' to indicate the person being supported.

Match the Latvian phrase with its English meaning. Match A2

Ordne jedem Element links seinen Partner rechts zu:

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: all

These are the standard translations for these related luck-based idioms.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A1

Anna: 'Man šodien ir svarīga prezentācija.' Juris: '_________________'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Turu īkšķus!

'Turu īkšķus!' is the most appropriate response to someone facing a stressful event.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Häufig gestellte Fragen

10 Fragen

Usually, you ask others to hold thumbs for you ('Turiet īkšķus!'). You don't typically say 'I am holding thumbs for myself.'

Yes, in informal or semi-formal emails to colleagues, it's a very nice touch.

The nominative plural is 'īkšķi,' but in this idiom, we use the accusative 'īkšķus.'

The phrase is plural, but the gesture can be one or both hands. The sentiment remains the same.

Not at all! It is used daily by all generations in Latvia.

No, that sounds strange. It must be 'īkšķus' (thumbs).

You can just say 'Es vēlu veiksmi!' (I wish luck!), which is the non-idiomatic version.

'Spiest' (to squeeze) is more intense, but 'turēt' is much more common.

Yes, it's the most common way to say you're rooting for a team.

Not really. A wedding isn't a 'test' of luck. Use 'Apsveicu!' (Congratulations!) instead.

Verwandte Redewendungen

🔗

Turēt dūres

similar

To hold fists (to root for someone)

🔗

Ne spalvas!

similar

Not a feather! (Break a leg!)

🔄

Vēlēt veiksmi

synonym

To wish luck

🔗

Piesist pie koka

related

To knock on wood

War das hilfreich?
Noch keine Kommentare. Sei der Erste, der seine Gedanken teilt!