Significado
Expressing happiness.
Contexto cultural
Latvians often use 'Prieks!' as a toast during informal gatherings, similar to 'Cheers!', though 'Priekā!' is more common for drinking. In Latvian culture, showing too much emotion can be seen as insincere. 'Man ir prieks' is the perfect 'middle ground' expression. The use of the dative for emotions is a shared feature with Lithuanian, reflecting a common psychological linguistic heritage. Among Latvians living abroad, this phrase is often used to maintain a sense of 'latviskums' (Latvianness) in polite conversation.
The 'Par' Rule
Whenever you are happy *about* something, always use 'par' + Accusative. It's the most common way to extend the phrase.
Don't say 'Es ir'
Never mix 'Es' with 'ir'. It's either 'Es esmu' (I am) or 'Man ir' (To me is).
Significado
Expressing happiness.
The 'Par' Rule
Whenever you are happy *about* something, always use 'par' + Accusative. It's the most common way to extend the phrase.
Don't say 'Es ir'
Never mix 'Es' with 'ir'. It's either 'Es esmu' (I am) or 'Man ir' (To me is).
Eye Contact
When saying 'Man ir prieks iepazīties,' make brief, firm eye contact. It shows your 'prieks' is sincere.
Ponte a prueba
Fill in the correct dative pronoun for 'I'.
____ ir prieks tevi redzēt!
In Latvian, expressions of feeling like 'prieks' require the dative case. 'Man' is the dative of 'Es'.
Choose the most natural way to say 'Nice to meet you'.
How do you greet someone you just met?
'Man ir prieks iepazīties' is the standard polite formula for introductions.
Complete the dialogue with the correct phrase.
A: Es nopirku jaunu mašīnu! B: Apsveicu! _________ par tevi!
When someone shares good news, you respond with 'Man ir prieks par tevi' (I am glad for you).
Match the phrase to the situation.
Situation: You are writing a formal email to a business partner.
'Patiess prieks' adds the necessary level of formal sincerity for business.
🎉 Puntuación: /4
Ayudas visuales
Es esmu vs Man ir
Banco de ejercicios
4 ejercicios____ ir prieks tevi redzēt!
In Latvian, expressions of feeling like 'prieks' require the dative case. 'Man' is the dative of 'Es'.
How do you greet someone you just met?
'Man ir prieks iepazīties' is the standard polite formula for introductions.
A: Es nopirku jaunu mašīnu! B: Apsveicu! _________ par tevi!
When someone shares good news, you respond with 'Man ir prieks par tevi' (I am glad for you).
Situation: You are writing a formal email to a business partner.
'Patiess prieks' adds the necessary level of formal sincerity for business.
🎉 Puntuación: /4
Preguntas frecuentes
10 preguntasYes! In casual settings, just saying 'Prieks!' with a smile is a very common way to say 'I'm glad!'
It is neutral. It works with your boss and your best friend. To make it formal, add 'patiess'.
'Prieks' is gladness/joy (often situational). 'Laime' is happiness/luck (often a deeper, long-term state).
Simply add 'nav' (is not): 'Man nav prieka.' Note that 'prieks' changes to 'prieka' in the negative.
No, use 'Man garšo' for food. 'Man ir prieks' is for social and emotional situations.
Change 'ir' to 'bija': 'Man bija prieks.'
Absolutely. It's very common in texts, often followed by an emoji like 😊.
Technically 'prieki' exists, but 'Man ir prieks' always uses the singular.
'Man' is dative (to me), 'Mani' is accusative (me). Latvian feelings 'belong' to the dative.
It might be a bit too personal unless they just shared some good news with you.
Frases relacionadas
Man patīk
similarI like
Es priecājos
builds onI am rejoicing
Liels paldies
similarMany thanks
Man ir bēdīgi
contrastI am sad
Priekā!
specialized formCheers!