意味
A new and sweet relationship.
文化的背景
Rice is the soul of Laos. Being 'Luk Khao Niaow' (Children of Sticky Rice) means that metaphors involving rice are the most deeply felt. 'Khao Mai' is a symbol of hope and the reward for hard work. Fish is the primary protein. A 'fatty' fish is a sign of a healthy ecosystem and a wealthy household. It represents the 'fat of the land.' During the Baci ceremony, white strings are tied around the wrists to bind the couple's spirits. The wish for 'Khao Mai Pla Man' is a wish for their spirits to remain in harmony. Even in the city, where people buy rice at the supermarket, the proverb survives as a nostalgic link to the country's rural roots.
Use it at weddings!
This is the #1 best place to use this phrase. It makes you sound very culturally aware and respectful.
Don't say 'Pla Wan'
Saying 'Pla Wan' (Sweet fish) makes it sound like you're talking about a snack, not a relationship.
意味
A new and sweet relationship.
Use it at weddings!
This is the #1 best place to use this phrase. It makes you sound very culturally aware and respectful.
Don't say 'Pla Wan'
Saying 'Pla Wan' (Sweet fish) makes it sound like you're talking about a snack, not a relationship.
The 'Shuang' Prefix
Adding 'Shuang' (ຊ່ວງ) before the phrase makes it sound more natural when talking about the 'period' of time.
Teasing is okay
It's perfectly fine to use this to tease your friends if they are being too romantic in public.
自分をテスト
Fill in the missing words for the proverb.
ເຂົ້າ____ປາ____
The correct proverb is 'Khao Mai' (New Rice) and 'Pla Man' (Oily Fish).
Which situation is best described as 'Khao Mai Pla Man'?
A couple has been married for 20 years and they are arguing about chores.
The phrase describes a sweet, conflict-free beginning, not a long-term relationship with conflict.
Complete the dialogue with the appropriate phrase.
A: ເຫັນສອງຄົນນັ້ນບໍ່? ຫວານກັນຄັກແທ້! B: ___________
Option A correctly uses the idiom to respond to a comment about a sweet couple.
Match the meaning to the component.
Match 'Khao Mai' and 'Pla Man' to their symbolic meanings.
New rice represents the fresh start, and oily fish represents the richness of the relationship.
🎉 スコア: /4
ビジュアル学習ツール
When to Use This Phrase
Perfect Situations
- • Weddings
- • New couples
- • Social media posts
Avoid These
- • Funerals
- • Business meetings
- • Divorce court
練習問題バンク
4 問題ເຂົ້າ____ປາ____
The correct proverb is 'Khao Mai' (New Rice) and 'Pla Man' (Oily Fish).
A couple has been married for 20 years and they are arguing about chores.
The phrase describes a sweet, conflict-free beginning, not a long-term relationship with conflict.
A: ເຫັນສອງຄົນນັ້ນບໍ່? ຫວານກັນຄັກແທ້! B: ___________
Option A correctly uses the idiom to respond to a comment about a sweet couple.
Match 'Khao Mai' and 'Pla Man' to their symbolic meanings.
New rice represents the fresh start, and oily fish represents the richness of the relationship.
🎉 スコア: /4
よくある質問
12 問Originally yes, but nowadays it is used for any serious romantic couple in their early stages.
In this context, 'Man' (ມັນ) means oily, fatty, or rich. It is a positive attribute for food.
It's rarely used for objects. It's almost exclusively for human relationships.
Culturally, it's usually considered the first year of marriage.
Not rude, but it might sound like you're teasing them for acting like teenagers.
There isn't one direct opposite, but 'Khuan Khiaw' (to be annoyed with each other) is a common contrast.
Yes, the proverb is a fixed four-word set. You cannot remove the fish!
Because they are the two most important staples of the Lao diet and represent prosperity.
No, it is too informal and romantic for standard business correspondence.
Yes, Thai has the exact same proverb (ข้าวใหม่ปลามັນ) with the same meaning.
No, it is 99% positive. Only 1% sarcastic if used for a couple that is fighting.
It is written as ເຂົ້າໃໝ່ປາມັນ.
関連フレーズ
ນ້ຳເຜີ້ງພະຈັນ
similarHoneymoon
ຫວານປານນ້ຳຕານ
similarSweet as sugar
ຜົວເມຍໃໝ່
specialized formNewlyweds
ຮັກກັນປານຈະກືນ
similarTo love each other so much you could swallow them
ຜິດຂ້ອງຕ້ອງຖຽງ
contrastTo bicker and argue