C1 Idiom Informal 2 min read

मुँह में दही जमना

munh mein dahi jamna

Curd sets in mouth

Literally: Curd (dahi) has set (jamna) in the mouth (muh mein).

In 15 Seconds

  • Used to ask why someone is suddenly silent or speechless.
  • Equivalent to the English 'Cat got your tongue?'
  • Best for informal teasing among friends and family.

Meaning

It is a playful way to ask someone why they are suddenly silent or unable to speak. It’s like asking, 'Has the cat got your tongue?'

Key Examples

3 of 6
1

Teasing a friend who won't reveal a secret

Batao na kya hua, muh mein dahi jama hai kya?

Tell me what happened, has curd set in your mouth?

2

A mother questioning a child who broke a vase

Ab bolte kyun nahi? Muh mein dahi jam gaya hai?

Why aren't you speaking now? Has curd set in your mouth?

3

In a meeting where no one is volunteering ideas

Sabke muh mein dahi kyun jama hai? Kuch toh bolo!

Why has curd set in everyone's mouth? Say something!

🌍

Cultural Background

Curd is a daily food, making this idiom very relatable. Similar concepts exist, though the specific food item might change. Used frequently in texting and social media.

🎯

Tone matters

Always keep a smile when saying this.

In 15 Seconds

  • Used to ask why someone is suddenly silent or speechless.
  • Equivalent to the English 'Cat got your tongue?'
  • Best for informal teasing among friends and family.

What It Means

This phrase describes a state of sudden, awkward silence. Imagine someone who usually talks a lot suddenly going quiet. It implies their mouth is so full of thick curd they cannot speak. It is not about being physically unable to talk. It is about choosing or being forced into silence by a situation.

How To Use It

You use it as a question to poke fun at someone. You can say Kya tumhare muh mein dahi jama hai?. This translates to 'Has curd set in your mouth?'. It is a rhetorical question. You are not actually asking about dairy products. You are asking why they are not answering you.

When To Use It

Use it when a friend is hiding a secret. Use it when a child is caught being naughty and stays silent. It works great when someone is shy during an introduction. It is perfect for lighthearted teasing among peers. You might use it if a colleague is unusually quiet in a meeting. It adds a touch of humor to a tense silence.

When NOT To Use It

Do not use this in very serious or tragic situations. If someone is silent due to grief, this is insensitive. Avoid using it with high-ranking bosses or elders you don't know well. It can sound a bit cheeky or rude. Do not use it if someone has an actual speech impairment. It is meant for psychological silence, not physical difficulty.

Cultural Background

In Indian households, curd (dahi) is a staple food. It takes hours to set and becomes a thick solid. The metaphor suggests that something has solidified in your mouth, making movement impossible. Curd is also seen as cooling. Perhaps the person's 'hot' arguments have cooled into a thick, silent block of curd!

Common Variations

You will mostly hear it as a question: Muh mein dahi jam gaya hai kya?. Sometimes people just say Muh mein dahi jama kar baithe ho. This means 'You are sitting there with curd set in your mouth'. Both versions carry the same teasing tone.

Usage Notes

This is a high-frequency informal idiom. It is almost always used as a question to prompt someone to speak up in a social or casual setting.

🎯

Tone matters

Always keep a smile when saying this.

Examples

6
#1 Teasing a friend who won't reveal a secret

Batao na kya hua, muh mein dahi jama hai kya?

Tell me what happened, has curd set in your mouth?

Uses the phrase as a classic rhetorical question.

#2 A mother questioning a child who broke a vase

Ab bolte kyun nahi? Muh mein dahi jam gaya hai?

Why aren't you speaking now? Has curd set in your mouth?

Common parental 'scolding' tone that is still light.

#3 In a meeting where no one is volunteering ideas

Sabke muh mein dahi kyun jama hai? Kuch toh bolo!

Why has curd set in everyone's mouth? Say something!

Used to break a professional but awkward silence.

#4 Texting a friend who hasn't replied to a juicy text

Reply kyun nahi kar rahe? Muh mein dahi jam gaya?

Why aren't you replying? Did curd set in your mouth?

Very common in digital messaging to prompt a response.

#5 A shy cousin meeting relatives for the first time

Arre, naye logon ko dekh kar muh mein dahi jam gaya?

Oh, did curd set in your mouth seeing new people?

Used to acknowledge shyness in a friendly way.

#6 During a heated debate when one person runs out of points

Ab kya hua? Muh mein dahi jam gaya?

What happened now? Has curd set in your mouth?

A slightly more aggressive, competitive use during an argument.

Test Yourself

Complete the idiom.

क्या तुम्हारे मुँह में ______ जम गया है?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: दही

The idiom is 'मुँह में दही जमना'.

🎉 Score: /1

Visual Learning Aids

Practice Bank

1 exercises
Complete the idiom. Fill Blank A1

क्या तुम्हारे मुँह में ______ जम गया है?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: दही

The idiom is 'मुँह में दही जमना'.

🎉 Score: /1

Frequently Asked Questions

1 questions

No, it is too informal.

Related Phrases

🔗

साँप सूंघ जाना

similar

To be terrified into silence

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