मतलब
To understand something complicated or challenging.
सांस्कृतिक पृष्ठभूमि
In American corporate culture, this phrase is often used in meetings to show you are working hard to understand a new strategy. Common in British English, often used in a slightly self-deprecating way to show you are not an expert. Used frequently in casual conversation, often shortened to 'get your head around'. Similar usage to the US, very common in both academic and social settings.
Use it for 'Big' Ideas
Only use this for things that are actually complex. Don't use it for simple things like 'I can't wrap my head around how to open this door.'
Not for Formal Writing
Keep this for speaking and casual emails. Use 'comprehend' or 'understand' for essays.
मतलब
To understand something complicated or challenging.
Use it for 'Big' Ideas
Only use this for things that are actually complex. Don't use it for simple things like 'I can't wrap my head around how to open this door.'
Not for Formal Writing
Keep this for speaking and casual emails. Use 'comprehend' or 'understand' for essays.
The Negative is Key
You will hear this phrase in the negative ('I can't...') much more often than in the positive.
खुद को परखो
Fill in the blank with the correct phrase.
I'm really trying to _____ the new rules, but they are so confusing!
The correct idiom is 'wrap my head around'.
Choose the sentence that uses the idiom correctly.
Which sentence is correct?
The idiom requires the possessive pronoun 'my' and the preposition 'around'.
Complete the dialogue.
A: 'This physics homework is impossible.' B: 'Yeah, it's hard to _____.'
The idiom is used to describe the difficulty of understanding.
Match the situation to the correct usage.
You are surprised by a friend's sudden move. What do you say?
The idiom is used for complex or surprising situations, not physical objects.
🎉 स्कोर: /4
विज़ुअल लर्निंग टूल्स
अभ्यास बैंक
4 अभ्यासI'm really trying to _____ the new rules, but they are so confusing!
The correct idiom is 'wrap my head around'.
Which sentence is correct?
The idiom requires the possessive pronoun 'my' and the preposition 'around'.
A: 'This physics homework is impossible.' B: 'Yeah, it's hard to _____.'
The idiom is used to describe the difficulty of understanding.
You are surprised by a friend's sudden move. What do you say?
The idiom is used for complex or surprising situations, not physical objects.
🎉 स्कोर: /4
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल
12 सवालIt depends. If the culture is very casual, yes. If it is formal, stick to 'understand'.
No, it is perfectly polite. It just shows you are human and find things difficult.
Yes, it is a common variation and sounds slightly more intellectual.
People will understand you, but it sounds unnatural. Always use 'around'.
Mostly, yes. We usually talk about the struggle of understanding, not the ease of it.
Very similar, but 'figure out' implies a solution, while 'wrap your head around' implies a process of understanding.
You can use it to understand a person's *behavior*, but not the person themselves.
It is used in both, as well as in Australia and Canada.
Both are used, but 'head' is more common in idiomatic speech.
Yes: 'I'll eventually wrap my head around it.'
Yes, it is a classic English idiom.
No, only for abstract concepts or ideas.
संबंधित मुहावरे
Get your head around
synonymTo understand something.
Grasp the concept
similarTo understand an idea.
Make sense of
similarTo find the logic in something.
Figure out
similarTo solve a problem.