意味
Heading out for shopping.
文化的背景
Latvians often bring their own bags to the shop to avoid paying for plastic ones and to be eco-friendly. The 'Central Market' (Centrāltirgus) in Riga is a major shopping destination, but you say 'iet uz tirgu' instead of 'veikalu'. Small corner shops are often called 'bode' in casual speech, a word borrowed from German. Many shops have 'taromāti' where you return bottles for a 10-cent deposit refund.
The 'Pēc' Rule
If you want to say what you are going for, use 'pēc' + Genitive. E.g., 'iet uz veikalu pēc maizes'.
Walking vs Driving
Don't say 'eju' if you are driving 10km to a mall; use 'braucu'.
意味
Heading out for shopping.
The 'Pēc' Rule
If you want to say what you are going for, use 'pēc' + Genitive. E.g., 'iet uz veikalu pēc maizes'.
Walking vs Driving
Don't say 'eju' if you are driving 10km to a mall; use 'braucu'.
The Bag Question
Cashiers will always ask 'Vai vajag maisiņu?' (Do you need a bag?). Be ready to say 'Nē, paldies' if you have your own.
自分をテスト
Fill in the correct form of the verb 'iet'.
Es ____ uz veikalu.
The first person singular form of 'iet' is 'eju'.
Which sentence is grammatically correct?
Select the correct direction:
'Uz' requires the accusative case ending '-u' for masculine nouns.
Complete the dialogue.
A: Vai mājās ir maize? B: Nē, es tūlīt ____ uz veikalu.
The context implies a future action ('tūlīt' - soon/immediately).
Match the phrase to the speed of the action.
You need to buy salt very quickly because the soup is boiling.
'Aizskriet' (to run) implies a very quick errand.
🎉 スコア: /4
ビジュアル学習ツール
練習問題バンク
4 問題Es ____ uz veikalu.
The first person singular form of 'iet' is 'eju'.
Select the correct direction:
'Uz' requires the accusative case ending '-u' for masculine nouns.
A: Vai mājās ir maize? B: Nē, es tūlīt ____ uz veikalu.
The context implies a future action ('tūlīt' - soon/immediately).
You need to buy salt very quickly because the soup is boiling.
'Aizskriet' (to run) implies a very quick errand.
🎉 スコア: /4
よくある質問
5 問Technically no, you should use 'braukt', but in casual conversation, if the focus is the errand, 'iet' is sometimes accepted.
'Veikals' is standard; 'bode' is informal/slang and usually refers to a smaller shop.
Yes, to indicate the direction 'to' the shop, 'uz' is required.
Use the locative case: 'Es esmu veikalā'.
Yes, but 'doties iepirkties' is more common for clothes shopping as a hobby.
関連フレーズ
iepirkties
similarto shop / to go shopping
iet uz tirgu
similarto go to the market
aizskriet uz veikalu
specialized formto pop to the shop
nākt no veikala
contrastto come from the shop