A1 Idiom Formal

Quloq soling

Listen carefully

Significado

Literally 'put an ear', meaning to pay attention.

🌍

Contexto cultural

Listening to elders is a sign of 'Iymon' (faith) and 'Tarbiyali' (being well-bred). A child who doesn't 'quloq solmoq' is seen as a failure of the parents' upbringing. In a 'Choyxona' (teahouse), men gather to discuss politics and life. 'Quloq soling' is used to signal the start of a serious story or a piece of news from another village. In classical poetry, the 'ear' is often personified. Poets ask the 'ear of the heart' (ko'ngil qulog'i) to listen to divine truths. On Telegram (the most popular app in Uzbekistan), voice notes are common. People often text 'Quloq soling' before sending a long voice message.

🎯

The 'Advice' Marker

If an Uzbek person starts a sentence with 'Menga quloq soling...', get ready for some serious life advice. It's a signal of sincerity.

⚠️

Case Sensitivity

Never forget the -ga! Saying 'Meni quloq soling' sounds like you want someone to physically put you somewhere.

Significado

Literally 'put an ear', meaning to pay attention.

🎯

The 'Advice' Marker

If an Uzbek person starts a sentence with 'Menga quloq soling...', get ready for some serious life advice. It's a signal of sincerity.

⚠️

Case Sensitivity

Never forget the -ga! Saying 'Meni quloq soling' sounds like you want someone to physically put you somewhere.

💬

Body Language

When someone says this to you, it is polite to slightly lean in or stop what you are doing with your hands to show you are 'putting your ear'.

Ponte a prueba

Fill in the correct case ending for the word 'Men' (I).

_____ quloq soling, iltimos!

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

The idiom 'quloq solmoq' requires the dative case. 'Menga' is the dative form of 'Men'.

Which sentence means 'Listen to the music'?

Select the correct Uzbek translation:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Musiqaga quloq soling.

'Musiqaga' is the dative form, and 'quloq soling' is the correct idiom for active listening.

Match the phrase to the most likely situation.

'Diqqat, e'lonlarga quloq soling!'

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: At a train station

This is a standard announcement phrase used in public transport hubs.

Complete the dialogue between a teacher and a student.

Ustoz: Bolalar, menga _____. O'quvchi: Xo'p, ustoz, eshityapmiz.

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

The teacher is addressing a group (plural), so 'soling' is the correct polite/plural form.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Ayudas visuales

When to use Quloq Soling

🎓

Education

  • Classroom
  • Lectures
  • Study groups
🏠

Daily Life

  • Advice
  • News
  • Music

Banco de ejercicios

4 ejercicios
Fill in the correct case ending for the word 'Men' (I). Fill Blank A1

_____ quloq soling, iltimos!

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

The idiom 'quloq solmoq' requires the dative case. 'Menga' is the dative form of 'Men'.

Which sentence means 'Listen to the music'? Choose A1

Select the correct Uzbek translation:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Musiqaga quloq soling.

'Musiqaga' is the dative form, and 'quloq soling' is the correct idiom for active listening.

Match the phrase to the most likely situation. situation_matching A2

'Diqqat, e'lonlarga quloq soling!'

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: At a train station

This is a standard announcement phrase used in public transport hubs.

Complete the dialogue between a teacher and a student. dialogue_completion A1

Ustoz: Bolalar, menga _____. O'quvchi: Xo'p, ustoz, eshityapmiz.

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

The teacher is addressing a group (plural), so 'soling' is the correct polite/plural form.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Preguntas frecuentes

10 preguntas

Yes, 'Radioga quloq soling' is perfectly correct and very common.

No, it's normal between siblings. It's only rude if used with someone you should be formal with.

'Tinglamoq' is more formal/literary. 'Quloq solmoq' is the idiomatic, everyday version.

In most contexts, yes. It can also mean 'to build' (uy solmoq) or 'to draw' (rasm solmoq - though 'chizmoq' is more common).

You say 'Quloq solyapman'.

It's better to use 'E'tiboringizni qaratishingizni so'raymiz' (We ask for your attention) in very formal writing.

Yes, 'Quloq soldim' (I listened/heeded).

It's an idiomatic convention. You are using your 'faculty of hearing' as a single concept.

You can, but it sounds like you are just checking if the teacher's voice is audible, not if you are learning.

You would say 'Menga quloq sol!' with a sharp tone. The idiom remains the same.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

Quloq tutmoq

similar

To listen intently/eavesdrop

🔗

Diqqat qilmoq

similar

To pay attention

🔗

Gapga kirmaslik

contrast

To be disobedient

🔗

Eshitib qolmoq

specialized form

To overhear by chance

🔗

Qulog'iga chalinmoq

similar

To catch a sound

¿Te ha servido?
¡No hay comentarios todavía. Sé el primero en compartir tus ideas!