意味
To finally understand something.
文化的背景
The 'tantusz' was a real object used until the 1970s. It had a specific shape so it couldn't be replaced by regular coins. This created a unique 'tantusz-culture' where people would trade or collect them. During the socialist era, public phones were often broken. The sound of the tantusz falling was a sign of relief that the expensive and rare connection actually worked. Younger Hungarians use the phrase ironically. If someone says something very obvious, a teenager might roll their eyes and say 'Gratulálok, leesett a tantusz?' In Hungarian offices, this is a common way to acknowledge a mistake or a misunderstanding without being too serious or apologetic.
Use the Dative
Always try to include 'nekem', 'neked', or 'neki' to sound more natural. 'Nekem leesett a tantusz' sounds much better than just 'Leesett a tantusz'.
Don't use for objects
If you drop your keys, don't say 'Leesett a tantusz'. People will think you just understood a joke about your keys!
意味
To finally understand something.
Use the Dative
Always try to include 'nekem', 'neked', or 'neki' to sound more natural. 'Nekem leesett a tantusz' sounds much better than just 'Leesett a tantusz'.
Don't use for objects
If you drop your keys, don't say 'Leesett a tantusz'. People will think you just understood a joke about your keys!
Sarcasm Alert
Be careful using this with your boss. If you say 'Na, végre leesett a tantusz?' to them, you might be looking for a new job tomorrow!
自分をテスト
Complete the sentence with the correct form of the idiom.
Már egy órája magyarázom, de neki még mindig nem ______ a tantusz.
We use 'esett le' (past tense) because the understanding has failed to happen up to this point.
Which situation best fits the phrase 'Leesett a tantusz'?
Válassza ki a megfelelő szituációt!
The idiom is about mental understanding, not physical objects falling or buying things.
What would the second speaker say?
A: Tudtad, hogy ma elmarad az óra? B: Tényleg? Akkor azért üres a terem! Most már ______.
The speaker is connecting the empty room to the news of the cancelled class.
🎉 スコア: /3
ビジュアル学習ツール
練習問題バンク
3 問題Már egy órája magyarázom, de neki még mindig nem ______ a tantusz.
We use 'esett le' (past tense) because the understanding has failed to happen up to this point.
Válassza ki a megfelelő szituációt!
The idiom is about mental understanding, not physical objects falling or buying things.
A: Tudtad, hogy ma elmarad az óra? B: Tényleg? Akkor azért üres a terem! Most már ______.
The speaker is connecting the empty room to the news of the cancelled class.
🎉 スコア: /3
よくある質問
10 問No, 'tantusz' is almost exclusively used in this idiom today. You won't find it in a modern store.
It's better to avoid it. Use 'ráébredt' or 'megértette' instead to maintain a professional tone.
'Leesett' is past tense (it happened), 'leesik' is present (it happens generally). Use 'leesett' for your own 'aha' moment.
No, it's quite common and friendly when helping a child with homework.
It's grammatically incorrect. Use 'Leesett a tantusz nekem'.
Yes, it is a very 'sticky' idiom that has survived multiple generations.
Yes, 'Vágom' is the most common slang equivalent for 'I get it'.
Only if you 'realize' where it is. If you just see it on the floor, no.
Not at all! It can be a math problem, a social situation, or a complex instruction.
Yes, it is a universal Hungarian idiom.
関連フレーズ
Vágja a témát
similarTo be very knowledgeable about a topic.
Kigyullad a villany
synonymThe light turns on (in the head).
Sötétben tapogatózik
contrastTo grope in the dark (to have no clue).
Beugrik valami
similarSomething pops into one's mind.