B1 Idiom 중립

сгорать от любопытства

сгорать от любопытства

to burn with curiosity

To be extremely eager to know something.

🌍

문화적 배경

The 'Curious Barbara' (Любопытная Варвара) rhyme is taught to children to discourage nosiness, but 'сгорать от любопытства' is the 'socially acceptable' version of curiosity among friends. 19th-century Russian novels often use 'burning' metaphors to describe the intense internal lives of the nobility, where showing too much emotion was taboo, but 'burning' inside was expected. In Russian social media (VK, Telegram), this phrase is often shortened or used with the 'fire' emoji to react to 'tea' or gossip. There is a minor superstition that if your ears are burning, someone is talking about you. This links the physical sensation of heat to social information, similar to the idiom.

💡

Use with 'просто'

Adding 'просто' (simply/just) makes it sound more natural: 'Я просто сгораю от любопытства!'

⚠️

Don't use for serious news

If someone says 'I have bad news,' do NOT use this phrase. It sounds like you are excited about their problem.

To be extremely eager to know something.

💡

Use with 'просто'

Adding 'просто' (simply/just) makes it sound more natural: 'Я просто сгораю от любопытства!'

⚠️

Don't use for serious news

If someone says 'I have bad news,' do NOT use this phrase. It sounds like you are excited about their problem.

🎯

The 'S' sound

Remember that 'сгорать' starts with a 'z' sound. Pronouncing it as 's-gorat' is a common beginner mistake.

💬

Body Language

When saying this, Russians often lean forward or widen their eyes to show the 'burning' interest.

셀프 테스트

Fill in the correct form of the word 'любопытство'.

Я просто сгораю от ___________!

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: любопытства

The preposition 'от' requires the Genitive case, which for 'любопытство' is 'любопытства'.

Which sentence is the most natural way to say 'I'm dying to know'?

Choose the best option:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Я сгораю от любопытства.

This is the standard idiomatic form with the correct prefix and preposition.

Match the phrase to the most appropriate situation.

Situation: Your sister just came back from a secret date and looks very happy.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Я сгораю от любопытства! Рассказывай всё!

This idiom is perfect for exciting personal news and secrets.

Complete the dialogue.

— У меня для тебя есть сюрприз. — Ой, не томи! Я уже ...

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ...сгораю от любопытства.

'Не томи' (don't keep me in suspense) is a perfect lead-in for this idiom.

Match the Russian idiom with its English equivalent.

Match the pairs:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: all

All these 'сгорать от...' idioms have direct or near-direct equivalents in English.

🎉 점수: /5

시각 학습 자료

연습 문제 은행

5 연습 문제
Fill in the correct form of the word 'любопытство'. Fill Blank B1

Я просто сгораю от ___________!

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: любопытства

The preposition 'от' requires the Genitive case, which for 'любопытство' is 'любопытства'.

Which sentence is the most natural way to say 'I'm dying to know'? Choose A2

Choose the best option:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Я сгораю от любопытства.

This is the standard idiomatic form with the correct prefix and preposition.

Match the phrase to the most appropriate situation. situation_matching B1

Situation: Your sister just came back from a secret date and looks very happy.

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: Я сгораю от любопытства! Рассказывай всё!

This idiom is perfect for exciting personal news and secrets.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion B1

— У меня для тебя есть сюрприз. — Ой, не томи! Я уже ...

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: ...сгораю от любопытства.

'Не томи' (don't keep me in suspense) is a perfect lead-in for this idiom.

Match the Russian idiom with its English equivalent. Match B1

왼쪽의 각 항목을 오른쪽의 짝과 연결하세요:

✓ 정답! ✗ 아쉬워요. 정답: all

All these 'сгорать от...' idioms have direct or near-direct equivalents in English.

🎉 점수: /5

자주 묻는 질문

12 질문

Yes, if you have a friendly relationship and are discussing a new project. It shows enthusiasm.

Yes, but 'сгорать' (imperfective) is much more common because it describes the feeling while you are having it.

They are almost identical. 'Умирать' is slightly more common in very informal speech.

Yes, in this idiom it is always a noun in the Genitive case.

No, for objects use 'сгорать от желания' (burning with desire) or 'очень хотеть'.

Not at all. It is used every day in modern Russian, including on social media.

Use the past tense: 'Я сгорал (masc) / сгорала (fem) от любопытства'.

It's rare. Usually, you'd just say 'Мне не очень интересно'.

No, every Russian speaker knows it is a metaphor.

People will understand you, but it will sound like a clear grammatical error.

You can just say 'Мне дико любопытно!' (I'm wildly curious!).

Yes! 'Я сгораю от любопытства, кто убийца.'

관련 표현

🔄

умирать от любопытства

synonym

To die of curiosity

🔗

сгорать от нетерпения

similar

To burn with impatience

🔗

любопытство не порок

builds on

Curiosity is not a vice

🔗

проявить интерес

specialized form

To show interest

🔗

сунуть нос не в своё дело

contrast

To stick one's nose in someone else's business

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