A1 Idiom Neutral

Mít volno

To be off work

Significado

Having no work or school.

🌍

Contexto cultural

The 'Chata' culture is central to 'mít volno'. Most people leave the city for the countryside on their days off. Czechs value their 'volno' highly and rarely answer work calls outside of working hours. 'Ředitelské volno' is a unique concept where school principals can give students up to 5 extra days off per year. On 'státní svátky' (state holidays), almost everyone 'má volno' by law, and large shops must close.

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The 'Mít' Rule

Always remember that time is something you 'possess' in Czech idioms. You 'have' time off, you don't 'be' it.

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Dating Danger

Saying 'Jsem volný' to a coworker might be interpreted as a romantic advance. Stick to 'Mám volno'.

Significado

Having no work or school.

💡

The 'Mít' Rule

Always remember that time is something you 'possess' in Czech idioms. You 'have' time off, you don't 'be' it.

⚠️

Dating Danger

Saying 'Jsem volný' to a coworker might be interpreted as a romantic advance. Stick to 'Mám volno'.

🎯

Public Holidays

If you see 'státní svátek' on a calendar, you can safely assume 'všichni mají volno'.

Ponte a prueba

Fill in the correct form of the verb 'mít'.

V pondělí ______ (já) volno.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: mám

The subject is 'já' (I), so the verb 'mít' must be 'mám'.

Which sentence is correct?

How do you say 'We have the day off tomorrow'?

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Zítra máme volno.

The idiom is 'mít volno'. 'Jsme volní' would mean 'We are single/free'.

Match the phrase to the situation.

You are at work and your boss asks you to work on Saturday, but you already have plans.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Mám volno.

'Mám volno' is the standard way to say you aren't scheduled to work.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Půjdeme v pátek do kina? B: V pátek nemůžu, musím být v práci. Ale v sobotu ______.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: mám volno

The speaker contrasts being at work with having time off on Saturday.

Match the Czech phrase with its English meaning.

1. Mám volno, 2. Mám čas, 3. Jsem volný

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 1-I have time off, 2-I have time (now), 3-I am single

This tests the three most commonly confused 'free' phrases.

🎉 Puntuación: /5

Ayudas visuales

Mít volno vs. Mít čas

Mít volno
Celý den All day
Práce/Škola Work/School
Mít čas
5 minut 5 minutes
Káva/Pokec Coffee/Chat

When do you have 'volno'?

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Calendar

  • Víkend
  • Svátek
  • Prázdniny
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Work

  • Dovolená
  • Po směně
  • Náhradní volno

Banco de ejercicios

5 ejercicios
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'mít'. Fill Blank A1

V pondělí ______ (já) volno.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: mám

The subject is 'já' (I), so the verb 'mít' must be 'mám'.

Which sentence is correct? Choose A1

How do you say 'We have the day off tomorrow'?

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Zítra máme volno.

The idiom is 'mít volno'. 'Jsme volní' would mean 'We are single/free'.

Match the phrase to the situation. situation_matching A2

You are at work and your boss asks you to work on Saturday, but you already have plans.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Mám volno.

'Mám volno' is the standard way to say you aren't scheduled to work.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: Půjdeme v pátek do kina? B: V pátek nemůžu, musím být v práci. Ale v sobotu ______.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: mám volno

The speaker contrasts being at work with having time off on Saturday.

Match the Czech phrase with its English meaning. Match B1

Empareja cada elemento de la izquierda con su par de la derecha:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: 1-I have time off, 2-I have time (now), 3-I am single

This tests the three most commonly confused 'free' phrases.

🎉 Puntuación: /5

Preguntas frecuentes

10 preguntas

No, that's 'mít pauzu'. 'Mít volno' is for much longer periods, usually a whole day or shift.

It's just 'mám volno'. If you want to include 'day', say 'mám volný den'.

Technically yes, but it usually implies a temporary break from a job you actually have. For unemployment, use 'jsem nezaměstnaný'.

Use 'Vzal jsem si volno'.

It's neutral. You can use it with your boss or your best friend.

It's a special day off for students granted by the school principal, not a national holiday.

No, use 'být na svobodě'.

No, 'prázdniny' is specifically for school holidays (summer, Christmas). 'Mít volno' is more general.

Mám hodně volného času.

It's better to say 'mám čas'. 'Mám volno' sounds like you aren't working all day.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

vzít si volno

builds on

To take time off

🔗

mít dovolenou

similar

To be on vacation

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mít čas

similar

To have time

🔗

mít oraz

specialized form

To have a break

🔗

volnočasové aktivity

builds on

Leisure activities

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