A1 Idiom Neutral

Vienā somā

In one bag

Bedeutung

Involved in the same situation.

🌍

Kultureller Hintergrund

Latvians value 'viensētnieka gars' (the spirit of the lone farmstead). Being 'put in one bag' is often seen as an insult to one's unique identity. In the Baltic states, shared history often leads to being 'lumped together' by outsiders. Locals use this phrase to distinguish their specific national identities. The phrase carries weight from the era of forced collectivism, where individual differences were suppressed. Using it today often asserts individual rights. In Latvian startups, 'vienā laivā' is replacing 'vienā somā' to sound more positive and team-oriented, following English business trends.

💡

Use with 'bāzt'

If you want to sound more like a native when complaining about generalizations, use the verb 'bāzt' (to shove).

⚠️

Locative Case

Make sure you use 'somā' (in the bag), not 'soma' (bag). The ending '-ā' is crucial.

Bedeutung

Involved in the same situation.

💡

Use with 'bāzt'

If you want to sound more like a native when complaining about generalizations, use the verb 'bāzt' (to shove).

⚠️

Locative Case

Make sure you use 'somā' (in the bag), not 'soma' (bag). The ending '-ā' is crucial.

💬

Solidarity

Using this phrase with a colleague can build rapport by acknowledging shared difficulties.

🎯

Soma vs Maiss

Use 'soma' for everyday situations and 'maiss' if you want to sound more emphatic or traditional.

Teste dich selbst

Fill in the missing word in the locative case.

Mēs abi nokavējām, mēs esam vienā ____.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: somā

The locative case 'somā' is required to mean 'in the bag'.

Which sentence is used to protest a stereotype?

Someone says: 'All Latvians love rye bread.' You want to say 'Don't generalize.'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Nebāz visus vienā somā!

'Nebāz visus vienā somā' is the standard way to tell someone not to lump everyone together.

Match the situation to the phrase.

Situation: You and your coworker both have to work on Saturday.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Mēs esam vienā somā.

This expresses the shared situation of having to work.

Complete the dialogue.

A: 'Man ir bail no eksāmena.' B: 'Man arī. Mēs ____.'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: esam vienā somā

B is expressing that they share the same fear and situation.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Soma vs. Laivā

Vienā somā
Generalizations Stereotipi
Shared burden Kopīgs smagums
Vienā laivā
Teamwork Komandas darbs
Shared goal Kopīgs mērķis

Aufgabensammlung

4 Aufgaben
Fill in the missing word in the locative case. Fill Blank A1

Mēs abi nokavējām, mēs esam vienā ____.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: somā

The locative case 'somā' is required to mean 'in the bag'.

Which sentence is used to protest a stereotype? Choose A2

Someone says: 'All Latvians love rye bread.' You want to say 'Don't generalize.'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Nebāz visus vienā somā!

'Nebāz visus vienā somā' is the standard way to tell someone not to lump everyone together.

Match the situation to the phrase. situation_matching A1

Situation: You and your coworker both have to work on Saturday.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Mēs esam vienā somā.

This expresses the shared situation of having to work.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: 'Man ir bail no eksāmena.' B: 'Man arī. Mēs ____.'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: esam vienā somā

B is expressing that they share the same fear and situation.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Häufig gestellte Fragen

12 Fragen

No, it's neutral. However, 'Nebāz mani vienā somā!' can sound defensive depending on your tone.

Usually no. It's almost always used for shared problems, burdens, or unfair groupings.

'Soma' is a bag (like a backpack or handbag), 'maiss' is a sack (like a potato sack). Both work in this idiom.

You can say 'Mēs esam vienā laivā' or 'Mēs esam vienā somā'. Both are understood.

Rarely. It's more common in conversation, journalism, and social media.

No, you can use it in past, present, or future. 'Bijām vienā somā', 'Esam vienā somā', 'Būsim vienā somā'.

Yes, adding 'lielā' (big) emphasizes that many people are involved.

Historically, bags were the primary way to transport goods in Latvia. Boxes were less common for travelers.

Yes, many Latvian pop and rock songs use it to describe shared social struggles.

Literally, yes. Figuratively, it's almost always about people or abstract concepts like 'ideas'.

The verb 'būt' (to be) is the most frequent.

The grammar is A1, but the idiomatic use is usually taught at A2 or B1. However, it's very useful for beginners.

Verwandte Redewendungen

🔗

Vienā laivā

similar

In the same boat

🔄

Visi vienā maisā

synonym

All in one sack

🔗

Mest pār vienu kārti

similar

To judge everyone by the same standard

🔗

Zem viena sitiena

specialized form

Under one blow

🔗

Kā divas ūdens piles

contrast

Like two drops of water

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