Bedeutung
Something that does not exist
Kultureller Hintergrund
The lotus is the state flower of India and holds deep religious significance. Calling it a 'sky lotus' is a powerful way to use a sacred symbol to illustrate a lie or a void. Ancient Tamil poets used 'Uvamai' (similes) extensively. This idiom is a 'Virodhabhasa' (oxymoron/contradiction) used to provoke thought. Tamil politics is famous for grand promises (freebies). Critics often use 'Aakaaya Thaamarai' in newspaper columns to mock these promises. This phrase is a standard technical term in Indian logic to explain 'absolute non-existence' (Atyantabhava).
Use it for Sarcasm
It's a very polite way to tell someone they are lying or being delusional.
Grammar Alert
Don't forget the 'th' (த்) in the middle. Without it, it sounds disjointed to native ears.
Bedeutung
Something that does not exist
Use it for Sarcasm
It's a very polite way to tell someone they are lying or being delusional.
Grammar Alert
Don't forget the 'th' (த்) in the middle. Without it, it sounds disjointed to native ears.
Pair it with 'Muyal Kombu'
If you want to sound like a real scholar, use both in a sentence to show you know your logic!
Teste dich selbst
Fill in the blank with the correct idiom.
அவன் சொன்ன பொய் ஒரு _________ போல இருந்தது.
The sentence says 'The lie he told was like a...', so 'sky lotus' (something non-existent) is the perfect fit.
Which situation best fits the use of 'Aakaaya Thaamarai'?
A person says:
Eating a star is a physical impossibility, making it a 'sky lotus.'
Match the Tamil phrase to its English equivalent concept.
Match the following:
Aakaaya Thaamarai is the idiom for something impossible/non-existent.
Complete the dialogue.
Manager: 'We can finish this in 1 hour!' Employee: 'No sir, that is a ________.'
The employee is pointing out that the manager's claim is impossible.
🎉 Ergebnis: /4
Visuelle Lernhilfen
Aufgabensammlung
4 Aufgabenஅவன் சொன்ன பொய் ஒரு _________ போல இருந்தது.
The sentence says 'The lie he told was like a...', so 'sky lotus' (something non-existent) is the perfect fit.
A person says:
Eating a star is a physical impossibility, making it a 'sky lotus.'
Ordne jedem Element links seinen Partner rechts zu:
Aakaaya Thaamarai is the idiom for something impossible/non-existent.
Manager: 'We can finish this in 1 hour!' Employee: 'No sir, that is a ________.'
The employee is pointing out that the manager's claim is impossible.
🎉 Ergebnis: /4
Häufig gestellte Fragen
10 FragenNo, it is a logical impossibility used only as a metaphor.
Yes, it is formal enough to describe an unrealistic proposal, but use it carefully so as not to sound too dismissive.
A lie can be about something real (e.g., 'I ate the apple'). A sky lotus is about something that *cannot* be real (e.g., 'I ate a square circle').
Yes, many Tamil movie songs use it to describe elusive love or impossible dreams.
Commonly written as Aagaya Thamarai or Aakaaya Thaamarai.
The concept is A1, but using it correctly in a sentence is more like A2/B1.
Yes, ஆகாயத் தாமரைகள் (Aakaaya Thaamaraigal), but it is usually used in the singular to represent a concept.
No, the idiom is fixed as 'Lotus' because of its cultural and logical history.
No, it is a poetic and intellectual way to express skepticism.
Yes, the equivalent is 'Akash-kusum'.
Verwandte Redewendungen
முயல் கொம்பு
synonymRabbit's horn
கானல் நீர்
similarMirage
பகற்கனவு
similarDaydream
கல்லில் நார் உரித்தல்
builds onPeeling fiber from a stone
வெற்று வேட்டு
contrastEmpty firecracker