A1 Expression 격식체

ເຊີນທາງນີ້

ເຊນທາງນ

This way please

Used to direct someone in a specific direction.

🌍

문화적 배경

The phrase is often accompanied by a slight bow of the head, especially if the person being guided is older or of higher status. In Thailand, the equivalent is 'Choen thang nee.' The languages are mutually intelligible, but the Lao 'Sern' has a distinct soft 's' sound compared to the Thai 'ch'. The use of 'Sern' reflects Buddhist values of hospitality and making others feel at ease (Sabaay). In Lao luxury hotels, staff are trained to say this while keeping their other hand behind their back or at their side to show humility.

🎯

The Palm Rule

Always keep your fingers together and palm open when gesturing. Never point!

💬

Add 'Chao'

Adding 'Chao' at the end makes you sound like a pro in the service industry.

Used to direct someone in a specific direction.

🎯

The Palm Rule

Always keep your fingers together and palm open when gesturing. Never point!

💬

Add 'Chao'

Adding 'Chao' at the end makes you sound like a pro in the service industry.

⚠️

Don't use with friends

Using this with your best friend might make them think you're joking or being sarcastic.

💡

Eye Contact

Make brief eye contact and smile before gesturing toward the path.

셀프 테스트

Fill in the missing polite verb.

[____] ທາງນີ້ເຈົ້າ.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ເຊີນ

'ເຊີນ' (Sern) is the correct polite verb for inviting someone this way.

Match the phrase to the correct situation.

You are a waiter leading a family to their table.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ເຊີນທາງນີ້ເຈົ້າ.

This is the standard polite phrase for service staff.

Complete the dialogue.

Guest: 'ຂໍໂທດ, ຫ້ອງນັ່ງຫຼິ້ນຢູ່ໃສ?' -> Host: 'ໂອ້, [____].'

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ເຊີນທາງນີ້

The host should politely guide the guest to the living room.

Which gesture should accompany 'ເຊີນທາງນີ້'?

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Open palm gesture

An open palm is the culturally respectful way to show direction in Laos.

🎉 점수: /4

시각 학습 자료

Where to use 'Sern Thang Nee'

🏨

Hospitality

  • Hotels
  • Restaurants
  • Cafes
🏠

Home

  • Welcoming Guests
  • Showing Rooms
  • Parties
🏛️

Public

  • Museums
  • Airports
  • Offices

연습 문제 은행

4 연습 문제
Fill in the missing polite verb. Fill Blank A1

[____] ທາງນີ້ເຈົ້າ.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ເຊີນ

'ເຊີນ' (Sern) is the correct polite verb for inviting someone this way.

Match the phrase to the correct situation. situation_matching A1

You are a waiter leading a family to their table.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ເຊີນທາງນີ້ເຈົ້າ.

This is the standard polite phrase for service staff.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

Guest: 'ຂໍໂທດ, ຫ້ອງນັ່ງຫຼິ້ນຢູ່ໃສ?' -> Host: 'ໂອ້, [____].'

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ເຊີນທາງນີ້

The host should politely guide the guest to the living room.

Which gesture should accompany 'ເຊີນທາງນີ້'? Choose A1

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Open palm gesture

An open palm is the culturally respectful way to show direction in Laos.

🎉 점수: /4

자주 묻는 질문

10 질문

No, it's perfect. It shows you respect your guests and take your role as a host seriously.

Usually, no. For driving, you'd use 'ລ້ຽວຊ້າຍ' (turn left) or 'ໄປຊື່ໆ' (go straight). This phrase is for physically leading someone.

'Sern' is an invitation to an action; 'Kalu na' is a request for a favor. 'Sern' is more common for directions.

A full Nop isn't required, but a slight head nod makes it much more authentic.

Yes, if you are pointing to a path further away from you, but 'thang nee' is more common as you are usually leading them.

Yes, it is gender-neutral. Both men and women use it.

Just say 'ທາງນີ້' (Thang nee) or 'ມາພີ້' (Ma phee).

Just say 'ທາງນີ້' with a smile and a gesture. The gesture carries 50% of the meaning!

Yes, it's almost identical in Thai ('Choen thang nee'), so it's a 'buy one get one free' phrase for travelers.

Yes, it's the standard phrase for inviting someone to enter.

관련 표현

🔗

ເຊີນນັ່ງ

similar

Please sit down

🔗

ເຊີນດື່ມນ້ຳ

similar

Please have a drink

🔗

ຕາມຂ້ອຍມາ

builds on

Follow me

🔗

ທາງນັ້ນ

contrast

That way

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