معنی
Medicine that tastes unpleasant
زمینه فرهنگی
The use of 'Vembu' (Neem) is ubiquitous. It is used in cooking, medicine, and religious rituals. The bitterness of neem is seen as a divine purifier. Siddha practitioners believe that 'Kasappu' (bitterness) balances the 'Pitta' dosha. Thus, bitter medicine is a core part of their pharmacopeia. Classical works like Thirukkural emphasize that a true friend is one who gives 'bitter' advice to prevent you from doing wrong. Protagonists in Tamil movies often use this phrase when they are about to do something 'violent' or 'harsh' to clean up society.
Use it for 'Tough Love'
This is the perfect phrase to use when you have to be strict with someone you care about.
Don't use for 'Poison'
Never use this for something that is purely harmful. Medicine must have a cure.
معنی
Medicine that tastes unpleasant
Use it for 'Tough Love'
This is the perfect phrase to use when you have to be strict with someone you care about.
Don't use for 'Poison'
Never use this for something that is purely harmful. Medicine must have a cure.
The '-āna' ending
Remember that 'Kasappu' is the noun. You MUST use 'Kasappāna' to describe the medicine.
خودت رو بسنج
Fill in the blank with the correct form of the phrase.
ஆசிரியரின் கண்டிப்பு மாணவர்களுக்கு ஒரு _________ போல இருக்கும்.
Teacher's discipline is often compared to bitter medicine because it is hard but helpful.
Which sentence uses the figurative meaning correctly?
Choose the correct sentence:
'Truth is always a bitter medicine' is a classic figurative use of the phrase.
Match the situation to the phrase.
A government increases taxes to pay off national debt. How would a journalist describe this?
Tax increases are unpleasant but often necessary for the economy, fitting the 'bitter medicine' metaphor.
Complete the dialogue.
அம்மா: 'இந்தக் கசப்பான மருந்தை ஏன் குடிக்க மாட்டேன் என்கிறாய்?' குழந்தை: 'ஏனென்றால் இது _________.'
The child refuses because it 'tastes very bitter' (kasakkirathu).
🎉 امتیاز: /4
ابزارهای بصری یادگیری
Medicine vs. Poison in Tamil Metaphor
بانک تمرین
4 تمرینهاஆசிரியரின் கண்டிப்பு மாணவர்களுக்கு ஒரு _________ போல இருக்கும்.
Teacher's discipline is often compared to bitter medicine because it is hard but helpful.
Choose the correct sentence:
'Truth is always a bitter medicine' is a classic figurative use of the phrase.
A government increases taxes to pay off national debt. How would a journalist describe this?
Tax increases are unpleasant but often necessary for the economy, fitting the 'bitter medicine' metaphor.
அம்மா: 'இந்தக் கசப்பான மருந்தை ஏன் குடிக்க மாட்டேன் என்கிறாய்?' குழந்தை: 'ஏனென்றால் இது _________.'
The child refuses because it 'tastes very bitter' (kasakkirathu).
🎉 امتیاز: /4
سوالات متداول
10 سوالNo, it is very commonly used for advice, criticism, and difficult life situations that lead to growth.
Literally yes, but it's not a common idiom. Figuratively, we might say 'Inippu poosiya visham' (Sugar-coated poison) for something that looks good but is bad.
Because traditional herbs like Neem and Chirata are extremely bitter and are the basis of many Tamil cures.
It is neutral. You can use it with your mother or in a business meeting.
க-ச-ப்-பா-ன. Make sure to include the 'pa' (ப்) before 'pā' (பா).
Not really, unless the movie taught you a very important life lesson. Otherwise, it's just a 'bad movie'.
There isn't a single phrase, but 'Iniya thunbam' (Sweet sorrow) or 'Inippu poochu' (Sugar-coating) are related concepts.
In some dialects, 'Kaippu' is used, but 'Kasappu' is the standard form in Tamil Nadu.
Yes, to describe a difficult challenge that helped you grow. 'That project was a bitter medicine for me.'
Not at all. It is used in daily news and modern conversations.
عبارات مرتبط
கசப்பான உண்மை
similarBitter truth
இனிப்புப் பூச்சு
contrastSugar-coating
கைப்பு
synonymBitterness (dialectal)
அமிர்தம்
contrastNectar/Ambrosia