A1 Expression Informal

धन्न

धनन

Fortunately

Significado

Expressing relief about a situation.

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Contexto cultural

In Nepal, 'Dhanna' is often accompanied by a physical gesture—a slight tilt of the head or a hand placed on the chest to emphasize the heart's relief. The root 'Dhanya' is used in 'Dhanyabaad' (Thank you) and 'Dhanyawaad' (Sanskrit). It implies that the person or situation is 'blessed'. In the chaotic traffic of Kathmandu, 'Dhanna' is perhaps the most frequently used word by pedestrians and micro-bus passengers. Even among Nepali speakers living abroad, 'Dhanna' remains a 'sticky' word that they rarely replace with 'Thank goodness' because it carries a specific emotional weight.

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The 'Phew' Breath

When you say 'Dhanna', exhale audibly after the word to sound 100% like a native speaker.

⚠️

Avoid Formal Letters

Never use 'Dhanna' in a visa application or a formal letter to a professor.

Significado

Expressing relief about a situation.

🎯

The 'Phew' Breath

When you say 'Dhanna', exhale audibly after the word to sound 100% like a native speaker.

⚠️

Avoid Formal Letters

Never use 'Dhanna' in a visa application or a formal letter to a professor.

💬

Empathy

If a friend tells you they avoided a problem, say 'Dhanna!' to show you care about their luck.

Ponte a prueba

Choose the correct word to express relief that you didn't lose your wallet.

______, मेरो पैसा हराएन ।

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

Dhanna is used for relief. Dhanyabaad is for thank you, Namaste is a greeting, and Maaf garnuhos is for sorry.

Fill in the blank to say 'Luckily, it didn't rain.'

धन्न, पानी ______ ।

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

Since Dhanna expresses relief, it is usually followed by a negative result (it DIDN'T rain). 'Parena' is the past negative.

Match the phrase to the situation.

Situation: You almost tripped but stayed standing.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: धन्न, म लडिनँ

This translates to 'Luckily, I didn't fall,' which fits the relief of almost tripping.

Complete the dialogue.

A: तिम्रो मोबाइल भेटियो? B: अँ, ______ !

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

B is expressing pure relief that the phone was found.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Ayudas visuales

When to say Dhanna

🛡️

Safety

  • Near accident
  • Not falling
  • Safe arrival

Time

  • Catching bus
  • Meeting deadline
  • Shop still open
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Items

  • Finding keys
  • Phone not broken
  • Money found

Banco de ejercicios

4 ejercicios
Choose the correct word to express relief that you didn't lose your wallet. Choose A1

______, मेरो पैसा हराएन ।

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

Dhanna is used for relief. Dhanyabaad is for thank you, Namaste is a greeting, and Maaf garnuhos is for sorry.

Fill in the blank to say 'Luckily, it didn't rain.' Fill Blank A1

धन्न, पानी ______ ।

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

Since Dhanna expresses relief, it is usually followed by a negative result (it DIDN'T rain). 'Parena' is the past negative.

Match the phrase to the situation. situation_matching A2

Situation: You almost tripped but stayed standing.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: धन्न, म लडिनँ

This translates to 'Luckily, I didn't fall,' which fits the relief of almost tripping.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: तिम्रो मोबाइल भेटियो? B: अँ, ______ !

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

B is expressing pure relief that the phone was found.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Preguntas frecuentes

10 preguntas

It has religious roots (Sanskrit), but today it is used by everyone regardless of faith as a secular exclamation.

Yes, but it's more common for 'avoiding' bad things than 'getting' big good things. For the lottery, 'Bhagya' (luck) is more common.

Yes, but it's more emotional. 'Luckily' is a fact; 'Dhanna' is a feeling.

Usually 'Dhanna' or 'Dhana'. 'Dhanna' is more accurate to the double 'n' sound.

Yes, this means 'Thank God'. It's a more religious version of the relief.

There isn't a single word, but 'Hait' or 'Lau' are used for 'Oh no' (bad luck).

Yes, it's perfectly safe and common for children to use.

No, 'Dhanna' is an interjection and never changes its form.

No, it's specifically for things that happened by chance or luck.

In Hindi, 'Dhanya' is used but usually in a more formal or religious sense. The specific 'Dhanna' for relief is very Nepali.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

धन्नै

similar

Almost / Nearly

🔗

धन्यवाद

builds on

Thank you

🔄

भाग्यले

synonym

By luck

🔗

राहत

similar

Relief

🔗

अहो

specialized form

Oh!

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