意味
Young and lacking experience.
文化的背景
In Cambodia, calling someone 'Kmeng Khchei' is often a way to 'save face' for them. Instead of saying they are 'stupid' or 'bad', you say they are 'green', implying they will eventually get better with time. Young entrepreneurs in Phnom Penh are currently reclaiming this term, using it to describe their 'fresh' and 'innovative' perspectives, though the traditional meaning remains dominant. Parents often use this phrase to maintain authority. As long as a child is 'kmeng khchei', they must defer to the parents' 'ripe' wisdom. Teachers use this to encourage students not to be discouraged by failure, framing it as a natural state of being 'unripe'.
Humility is Key
Using 'Kmeng Khchei' to describe yourself in Cambodia is a great way to show you are humble and willing to learn from elders.
Watch the Age Gap
Never use this phrase to describe someone older than you, even if they are new to the job. It is considered disrespectful.
意味
Young and lacking experience.
Humility is Key
Using 'Kmeng Khchei' to describe yourself in Cambodia is a great way to show you are humble and willing to learn from elders.
Watch the Age Gap
Never use this phrase to describe someone older than you, even if they are new to the job. It is considered disrespectful.
The 'Kar-ngea' Add-on
If you want to be specific, say 'Kmeng khchei kar-ngea' (green at work). It sounds more professional and less like a personal insult.
自分をテスト
Fill in the blank with the correct phrase.
បុគ្គលិកថ្មីនេះធ្វើការខុសច្រើន ព្រោះគាត់នៅ_______។
The sentence says the new staff makes many mistakes, which implies they are 'kmeng khchei' (inexperienced).
Which situation best fits the use of 'Kmeng Khchei'?
A person who...
This fits the 'young and lacking experience' definition perfectly.
Complete the dialogue.
A: តើខ្ញុំអាចដឹកនាំក្រុមនេះបានទេ? B: ខ្ញុំបារម្ភថាឯងនៅ_______ពេក។
The speaker is expressing worry (barom), which suggests they think the person is too green for the leadership role.
🎉 スコア: /3
ビジュアル学習ツール
練習問題バンク
3 問題បុគ្គលិកថ្មីនេះធ្វើការខុសច្រើន ព្រោះគាត់នៅ_______។
The sentence says the new staff makes many mistakes, which implies they are 'kmeng khchei' (inexperienced).
A person who...
This fits the 'young and lacking experience' definition perfectly.
A: តើខ្ញុំអាចដឹកនាំក្រុមនេះបានទេ? B: ខ្ញុំបារម្ភថាឯងនៅ_______ពេក។
The speaker is expressing worry (barom), which suggests they think the person is too green for the leadership role.
🎉 スコア: /3
よくある質問
5 問It depends on the tone. It can be a gentle excuse for a mistake, or a dismissive way to say someone isn't ready for responsibility.
Yes, if they are starting a completely new career where they have no experience, but 'Thmei Thmong' might be more common for that age.
Mostly yes. For fruit, you just use 'Khchei'. For people, you add 'Kmeng'.
The opposite is 'Chas Tum' (ចាស់ទុំ), which means mature or ripe.
You can say 'Khnhom nov kmeng khchei' (ខ្ញុំនៅក្មេងខ្ចី).
関連フレーズ
ថ្មីថ្មោង
similarBrand new / fresh
ចាស់ទុំ
contrastMature / Ripe
មិនដឹងអី
synonymDoesn't know anything
ខ្ចីញ៉េញ
specialized formExtremely green / very unripe