A2 Collocation तटस्थ

தாகம் எடுத்தல்

தகம எடததல

Getting thirsty

मतलब

Feeling the need for water.

🌍

सांस्कृतिक पृष्ठभूमि

The 'Neer-pandal' is a unique summer tradition where free water and spiced buttermilk are served to the public to combat the intense heat. Offering water is the first step of 'Virunthombal' (hospitality). It is considered a sin to let a guest leave thirsty. In many Tamil temples, 'Abishekam' (ritual bathing of the deity) involves water, milk, and honey, symbolizing the quenching of spiritual thirst. Farmers often carry 'Thanni-muttai' (water bags) or 'Sombu' (metal pots) to the fields, and sharing water with fellow laborers is a common social bond.

🎯

The Dative Rule

Always remember: Thirst is something that happens *to* you. Use 'Enakku' (to me), not 'Nān' (I).

💬

Polite Requests

If you are a guest, it's more polite to say 'Thākam eṭukkiratu' than to bluntly ask for water. It prompts the host to offer it.

मतलब

Feeling the need for water.

🎯

The Dative Rule

Always remember: Thirst is something that happens *to* you. Use 'Enakku' (to me), not 'Nān' (I).

💬

Polite Requests

If you are a guest, it's more polite to say 'Thākam eṭukkiratu' than to bluntly ask for water. It prompts the host to offer it.

⚠️

Spelling Matters

Don't confuse 'Thākam' (thirst) with 'Thākkam' (impact). One 'k' makes a big difference!

खुद को परखो

Fill in the blank with the correct form of the person.

_______ தாகம் எடுக்கிறது. (I am thirsty.)

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: எனக்கு

Bodily sensations in Tamil require the dative case 'எனக்கு' (to me).

Which sentence is the most natural way to say 'He was thirsty'?

Choose the correct past tense sentence:

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: அவனுக்குத் தாகம் எடுத்தது.

The verb must be 3rd person singular neuter (eṭuttatu) to agree with 'Thākam'.

Complete the dialogue.

A: வெயில் அதிகமா இருக்கு. B: ஆமாம், எனக்கு ரொம்ப _______.

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: தாகம் எடுக்குது

In the context of 'Veyil' (heat/sun), 'thākam' (thirst) is the most logical sensation.

Match the phrase to the situation.

When would you say 'தாகம் தீர்ந்தது' (Thirst is quenched)?

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: After drinking water

'Thīrnthatu' means finished or resolved, used after the need is met.

🎉 स्कोर: /4

विज़ुअल लर्निंग टूल्स

अभ्यास बैंक

4 अभ्यास
Fill in the blank with the correct form of the person. Fill Blank A2

_______ தாகம் எடுக்கிறது. (I am thirsty.)

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: எனக்கு

Bodily sensations in Tamil require the dative case 'எனக்கு' (to me).

Which sentence is the most natural way to say 'He was thirsty'? Choose A2

Choose the correct past tense sentence:

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: அவனுக்குத் தாகம் எடுத்தது.

The verb must be 3rd person singular neuter (eṭuttatu) to agree with 'Thākam'.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: வெயில் அதிகமா இருக்கு. B: ஆமாம், எனக்கு ரொம்ப _______.

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: தாகம் எடுக்குது

In the context of 'Veyil' (heat/sun), 'thākam' (thirst) is the most logical sensation.

Match the phrase to the situation. situation_matching B1

When would you say 'தாகம் தீர்ந்தது' (Thirst is quenched)?

✓ सही! ✗ बिलकुल नहीं। सही जवाब: After drinking water

'Thīrnthatu' means finished or resolved, used after the need is met.

🎉 स्कोर: /4

अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल

5 सवाल

Yes, in very casual speech, people understand 'Enakku thākam'. But 'Thākam eṭukkutu' is more complete and natural.

No, for hunger you must use 'Pasi'. 'Pasi eṭukkiratu' is the equivalent phrase.

It's an idiomatic use of the verb to show the onset of a physical state. Think of it as the sensation 'taking' your attention.

Say 'Enakku thākam eṭukkavillai' or simply 'Thākam illai'.

Yes, 'Athigāra thākam' (thirst for power) is a common formal expression.

संबंधित मुहावरे

🔗

பசி எடுத்தல்

similar

Feeling hungry

🔗

தாகம் தீர்த்தல்

builds on

Quenching thirst

🔗

தண்ணீர் வேட்கை

specialized form

Intense longing for water

🔗

நா வறளுதல்

similar

Tongue drying up

क्या यह मददगार था?
अभी तक कोई टिप्पणी नहीं। अपने विचार साझा करने वाले पहले व्यक्ति बनें!