A1 Collocation Neutral

Gatavot vakariņas

To cook dinner

Significado

A common kitchen activity.

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Contexto cultural

Dinner is traditionally the largest meal of the day for working families, often served between 6 PM and 8 PM. It almost always includes potatoes in some form. In Latvian communities abroad (USA, Canada, UK), 'gatavot vakariņas' often involves traditional recipes like 'pelēkie zirņi' (grey peas) to maintain cultural identity. There is a strong 'foodie' culture in Riga, where 'gatavot vakariņas' might involve fusion recipes and ingredients from the Central Market. In the countryside, dinner preparation is often tied to the seasonal harvest. What you cook depends on what is currently growing in the 'dārzs' (garden).

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The 'Ready' Rule

Remember that 'gatavot' comes from 'gatavs' (ready). You are literally 'readying' the meal.

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Plural Only!

Never say 'vakariņa'. It's like saying 'a pant' instead of 'pants' in English.

Significado

A common kitchen activity.

💡

The 'Ready' Rule

Remember that 'gatavot' comes from 'gatavs' (ready). You are literally 'readying' the meal.

⚠️

Plural Only!

Never say 'vakariņa'. It's like saying 'a pant' instead of 'pants' in English.

🎯

Use Prefixes

Use 'pagatavot' when you want to sound like you've successfully finished the task.

Ponte a prueba

Fill in the correct form of the verb 'gatavot' in the present tense.

Es šovakar _______ vakariņas.

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

The subject 'Es' (I) requires the first-person singular ending '-oju.'

Which of these is the correct way to say 'to make dinner'?

Izvēlies pareizo variantu:

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

'Vakariņas' must be plural, and 'gatavot' is the correct verb for food preparation.

Complete the dialogue with the correct future tense form.

A: Ko tu darīsi rīt vakarā? B: Es _______ vakariņas savai ģimenei.

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

The question asks about 'rīt' (tomorrow), so the future tense 'gatavošu' is needed.

Match the phrase to the correct situation.

Match: 'Es gatavoju vakariņas' with...

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: You are in the kitchen with a pan.

The phrase describes the act of preparing the evening meal.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Ayudas visuales

Kitchen Vocabulary

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Verbs

  • Gatavot
  • Vārīt
  • Cept
🍽️

Meals

  • Brokastis
  • Pusdienas
  • Vakariņas

Banco de ejercicios

4 ejercicios
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'gatavot' in the present tense. Fill Blank A1

Es šovakar _______ vakariņas.

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

The subject 'Es' (I) requires the first-person singular ending '-oju.'

Which of these is the correct way to say 'to make dinner'? Choose A1

Izvēlies pareizo variantu:

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

'Vakariņas' must be plural, and 'gatavot' is the correct verb for food preparation.

Complete the dialogue with the correct future tense form. dialogue_completion A2

A: Ko tu darīsi rīt vakarā? B: Es _______ vakariņas savai ģimenei.

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

The question asks about 'rīt' (tomorrow), so the future tense 'gatavošu' is needed.

Match the phrase to the correct situation. situation_matching A1

Match: 'Es gatavoju vakariņas' with...

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: You are in the kitchen with a pan.

The phrase describes the act of preparing the evening meal.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Preguntas frecuentes

10 preguntas

Yes, it's very common in spoken Latvian, but 'gatavot' is preferred in formal writing.

Yes, it is a plurale tantum. There is no singular form in standard Latvian.

'Gatavot' is general preparation; 'vārīt' specifically means to boil or cook soup.

Use the present tense: 'Es gatavoju vakariņas.'

Usually between 6 PM and 8 PM, which is standard for Northern Europe.

Yes, but they might also use 'gatavot maltīti' or 'strādāt virtuvē.'

It is in the accusative case because it's the direct object, but it looks like the nominative.

Yes, it's a very regular 2nd conjugation verb.

Yes, that means 'to prepare food' and is more general.

You can still use 'gatavot,' but 'uzsildīt vakariņas' (to heat up dinner) is more precise.

Frases relacionadas

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Gatavot brokastis

similar

To make breakfast

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Gatavot pusdienas

similar

To make lunch

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Klāt galdu

builds on

To set the table

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Mazgāt traukus

contrast

To wash dishes

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