A1 Expression Formell

தயவு செய்து

தயவ சயத

Please

Bedeutung

A polite request

🌍

Kultureller Hintergrund

In Tamil Nadu, using 'Thayavu seidhu' is often accompanied by a small nod or joining of hands (Vanakkam gesture) in very formal settings. Sri Lankan Tamils use 'Thayavu seidhu' frequently, but you might also hear 'Karunai koornthu' (having showered mercy) in very formal or religious contexts. In Singapore, 'Thayavu seidhu' is seen on almost all public transport signs, making it one of the most recognized Tamil phrases by non-Tamil speakers. Malaysian Tamil often mixes 'Please' with Tamil, but 'Thayavu seidhu' remains the standard for formal education and media.

🎯

The 'Konjam' Trick

If 'Thayavu seidhu' feels too formal, add 'Konjam' (a little) after it. 'Thayavu seidhu konjam nagarunga' sounds incredibly natural and polite.

⚠️

Don't overdo it

Using it in every single sentence with your family will make you sound like a robot or a stranger. Use it for new people or formal needs.

Bedeutung

A polite request

🎯

The 'Konjam' Trick

If 'Thayavu seidhu' feels too formal, add 'Konjam' (a little) after it. 'Thayavu seidhu konjam nagarunga' sounds incredibly natural and polite.

⚠️

Don't overdo it

Using it in every single sentence with your family will make you sound like a robot or a stranger. Use it for new people or formal needs.

💬

Body Language

A slight tilt of the head to the side while saying this phrase adds an extra layer of authentic Tamil politeness.

Teste dich selbst

Fill in the blank to make the request polite.

_______ _______ கதவைத் திறங்கள். (Please open the door.)

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செய்து

'Thayavu seidhu' is the correct phrase for 'Please'.

Which of these is the most natural spoken version?

How would you say 'Please' to a friend in Chennai?

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செஞ்சு

'Thayavu senju' is the common colloquial/spoken form.

Complete the dialogue at a restaurant.

Server: என்ன வேண்டும்? (What do you want?) Learner: _______ _______ ஒரு டீ கொடுங்கள்.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செய்து

You use 'Please' when ordering.

Match the phrase to the situation.

You are in a library and someone is talking loudly.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செய்து அமைதியாக இருங்கள்.

This means 'Please be quiet'.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Formal vs Spoken

Written (Formal)
தயவு செய்து Thayavu Seidhu
Spoken (Casual)
தயவு செஞ்சு Thayavu Senju

Aufgabensammlung

4 Aufgaben
Fill in the blank to make the request polite. Fill Blank A1

_______ _______ கதவைத் திறங்கள். (Please open the door.)

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செய்து

'Thayavu seidhu' is the correct phrase for 'Please'.

Which of these is the most natural spoken version? Choose A2

How would you say 'Please' to a friend in Chennai?

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செஞ்சு

'Thayavu senju' is the common colloquial/spoken form.

Complete the dialogue at a restaurant. dialogue_completion A1

Server: என்ன வேண்டும்? (What do you want?) Learner: _______ _______ ஒரு டீ கொடுங்கள்.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செய்து

You use 'Please' when ordering.

Match the phrase to the situation. situation_matching A2

You are in a library and someone is talking loudly.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: தயவு செய்து அமைதியாக இருங்கள்.

This means 'Please be quiet'.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Häufig gestellte Fragen

10 Fragen

You can, but it might sound a bit formal. It's better to use 'Konjam' or just the polite verb form.

No, it's the standard spoken form. Use 'Seidhu' for writing and 'Senju' for talking.

Usually at the beginning. Putting it at the end is rare and usually only for emphasis.

In casual speech, people often just use the English word 'Please' or add '-nga' to the verb.

No. For 'You're welcome', use 'Paravaillai' or 'Nandri'.

No, it is completely gender-neutral.

'Thayavu' is the noun form used in this phrase. 'Thayai' is a more classical/poetic version of the same root.

No, use 'Mannikkavum' to get someone's attention or apologize.

Yes, it is used exactly the same way in Sri Lanka.

Say 'Thayavu seidhu' followed by the negative verb, e.g., 'Thayavu seidhu seiyatheenga' (Please don't do it).

Verwandte Redewendungen

🔗

தயவு செஞ்சு

similar

Spoken version of please

🔗

தயை கூர்ந்து

specialized form

Very formal please

🔗

கொஞ்சம்

similar

A little

🔗

மன்னிக்கவும்

similar

Excuse me / Sorry

🔗

நன்றி

contrast

Thank you

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