A1 Idiom غیر رسمی

Bāzt degunu citu lietās

Stick nose in others' business

معنی

Being nosy.

🌍

زمینه فرهنگی

Latvians value 'viensētnieka gars' (the spirit of a solitary farmer). This means that even in cities, people expect a high degree of privacy and may find personal questions from acquaintances very intrusive. Because of the history of surveillance in the 20th century, there is a specific cultural distaste for people who 'stick their nose' into others' political or private business. In small Latvian villages, everyone *does* know everyone's business, but the idiom is used as a social tool to keep gossip in check. Modern Latvians are very protective of their digital data. This idiom is frequently used in discussions about GDPR and social media privacy settings.

💡

Use with 'Nebāz'

The most common way you'll hear this is in the negative: 'Nebāz degunu...' (Don't stick your nose...).

⚠️

Be careful with elders

Telling an older person 'Nebāziet degunu...' is considered very rude. Use 'Tas ir privāti' (That is private) instead.

معنی

Being nosy.

💡

Use with 'Nebāz'

The most common way you'll hear this is in the negative: 'Nebāz degunu...' (Don't stick your nose...).

⚠️

Be careful with elders

Telling an older person 'Nebāziet degunu...' is considered very rude. Use 'Tas ir privāti' (That is private) instead.

🎯

Add 'savu'

Adding 'savu' (one's own) makes it sound more natural: 'Nebāz savu degunu...'

💬

The 'Long Nose'

If you call someone a 'garš deguns' (long nose), you are calling them a busybody.

خودت رو بسنج

Fill in the missing word in the idiom.

Lūdzu, nebāz ______ citu lietās!

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: degunu

The idiom specifically uses 'degunu' (nose).

Which sentence is the most natural way to tell someone to mind their own business?

Kā pateikt 'Mind your own business' latviski?

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: Nebāz degunu citu lietās.

This is the standard idiomatic equivalent.

Complete the dialogue with the correct form of the idiom.

A: Vai tu zini, cik nopelnīja Jānis? B: Nē, un es ______.

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: nebāžu degunu citu lietās

The speaker is saying they don't pry into others' affairs.

Match the situation to the response.

Situation: Your neighbor asks why you are buying so much toilet paper.

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: Nebāziet degunu citu lietās!

The neighbor is being nosy about your private purchases.

🎉 امتیاز: /4

ابزارهای بصری یادگیری

بانک تمرین

4 تمرین‌ها
Fill in the missing word in the idiom. جای خالی A1

Lūdzu, nebāz ______ citu lietās!

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: degunu

The idiom specifically uses 'degunu' (nose).

Which sentence is the most natural way to tell someone to mind their own business? Choose A1

Kā pateikt 'Mind your own business' latviski?

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: Nebāz degunu citu lietās.

This is the standard idiomatic equivalent.

Complete the dialogue with the correct form of the idiom. dialogue_completion A2

A: Vai tu zini, cik nopelnīja Jānis? B: Nē, un es ______.

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: nebāžu degunu citu lietās

The speaker is saying they don't pry into others' affairs.

Match the situation to the response. situation_matching A1

Situation: Your neighbor asks why you are buying so much toilet paper.

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: Nebāziet degunu citu lietās!

The neighbor is being nosy about your private purchases.

🎉 امتیاز: /4

سوالات متداول

10 سوال

It can be. It's a direct rebuke. Use it only when you are genuinely annoyed or with close friends as a joke.

Yes! You can say 'Es negribu bāzt degunu tavās lietās, bet...' (I don't want to pry, but...) to soften a personal question.

Even if multiple people are being nosy, we usually keep 'degunu' in the singular or say 'nebāziet savus degunus'.

Yes, 'Tā ir mana privātā lieta' (That is my private matter) is more neutral.

Mostly, but you can use it for organizations or governments meddling in affairs.

You can say 'ziņkārīgs cilvēks' (curious person) or more informally 'deguna bāzējs'.

No, it is too informal for professional writing.

It means to shove, stick, or thrust something into a space.

Yes, it appears in many Latvian pop and rock songs about social freedom.

No, that's not an idiom. For listening, we say 'noklausīties'.

عبارات مرتبط

🔗

Jaukties pa vidu

similar

To interfere in the middle of something

🔗

Bāzties virsū

similar

To push oneself onto someone

🔗

Turēt mēli aiz zobiem

contrast

To keep one's tongue behind teeth

🔗

Skatīties savā šķīvī

similar

To look in one's own plate

🔗

Izspiegot

specialized form

To spy

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