意味
Common Khmer greeting showing care for others.
文化的背景
Food is the primary social glue. If you visit a home, you will be asked 'Nyam ey nov?' within the first 60 seconds. Refusing food is okay, but you should always accept a glass of water. On Telegram (the most popular app in Cambodia), 'Nyam nov?' is a standard 'thinking of you' text. It's less about the food and more about maintaining the connection. In Khmer-American or Khmer-French communities, this phrase is a way to preserve identity. Even if the younger generation speaks English/French, they often still use this phrase with elders. The hierarchy of 'eating' verbs is a window into the Khmer social structure. Using the wrong verb isn't just a mistake; it's a sign of your upbringing (meryien).
The 'Already Eaten' Default
If you want to be polite and not bother someone, always answer 'Nyam hay' (Already eaten), even if you're a bit hungry.
Don't be too literal
If someone asks you this at 10 AM, they aren't necessarily asking about breakfast; they are just saying hello.
意味
Common Khmer greeting showing care for others.
The 'Already Eaten' Default
If you want to be polite and not bother someone, always answer 'Nyam hay' (Already eaten), even if you're a bit hungry.
Don't be too literal
If someone asks you this at 10 AM, they aren't necessarily asking about breakfast; they are just saying hello.
The Rice Rule
If you say 'Nyam bay' (Eat rice), it applies to pizza, noodles, or burgers too. Rice is the category for all food.
自分をテスト
What is the most natural way to greet a friend you see at 2 PM?
You see your friend Dara. What do you say?
While the others are grammatically correct, 'ញ៉ាំអីនៅ?' is the most culturally natural and warm greeting.
Complete the response to 'ញ៉ាំអីនៅ?'
A: ញ៉ាំអីនៅ? B: ញ៉ាំ____។ (Already)
'ហើយ' (hay) means 'already' and is the standard way to say you've finished eating.
Match the verb for 'eat' with the correct person.
Who do you use these verbs with?
Nyam is informal, Pisa is formal/polite, and Chan is specifically for monks.
Complete the casual dialogue.
Sophea: សួស្តី! ញ៉ាំអីនៅ? Bora: នៅទេ ចុះសូភាវិញ? Sophea: ____ដែរ។ តោះទៅញ៉ាំអីជាមួយគ្នា!
Sophea is inviting Bora to eat, so she must also have 'not yet' (នៅ) eaten.
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ビジュアル学習ツール
The 'Eat' Verb Hierarchy
Informal
- • ញ៉ាំ (Nyam)
- • ហូប (Hop)
Formal
- • ពិសា (Pisa)
Religious
- • ឆាន់ (Chan)
Royal
- • សោយ (Svoy)
練習問題バンク
4 問題You see your friend Dara. What do you say?
While the others are grammatically correct, 'ញ៉ាំអីនៅ?' is the most culturally natural and warm greeting.
A: ញ៉ាំអីនៅ? B: ញ៉ាំ____។ (Already)
'ហើយ' (hay) means 'already' and is the standard way to say you've finished eating.
Who do you use these verbs with?
Nyam is informal, Pisa is formal/polite, and Chan is specifically for monks.
Sophea: សួស្តី! ញ៉ាំអីនៅ? Bora: នៅទេ ចុះសូភាវិញ? Sophea: ____ដែរ។ តោះទៅញ៉ាំអីជាមួយគ្នា!
Sophea is inviting Bora to eat, so she must also have 'not yet' (នៅ) eaten.
🎉 スコア: /4
よくある質問
10 問Not necessarily. In a casual street greeting, it's just a 'Hello'. However, if you ask it inside your home, it is polite to have a snack or water ready.
You can say 'Nov te' (Not yet). If you are with friends, they will likely say 'Let's go eat!'. If you are with an elder, they will likely cook for you.
'Nyam' is more modern and common in cities. 'Hop' is perfectly fine but can sound a bit more traditional or rural.
Yes, you can use it any time of day. It's a 24/7 greeting.
You must say 'Preah techeakun chan rouch nov?' (Venerable, have you finished eating yet?). Never use 'Nyam'.
'Bay' (rice) is the traditional term. 'Ey' (what) is slightly more modern and casual. Both are used interchangeably.
It's not 'rude' to just say 'Suesdei', but adding 'Nyam ey nov?' makes you sound much more fluent and culturally integrated.
Say 'Nyam hay' (Eat already) or 'P'aet hay' (Full already).
If you have a friendly relationship, yes. If it's a very formal corporate environment, stick to 'Sok sabay te?'.
No, 'Nov' can also mean 'at', 'in', or 'to stay'. But at the end of a question, it almost always means 'yet?'.
関連フレーズ
សុកសប្បាយទេ? (Sok sabay te?)
similarAre you well?
ទៅណា? (Tou na?)
similarWhere are you going?
ញ៉ាំបាយ! (Nyam bay!)
builds onEat rice! / Come eat!
ឆ្ងាញ់ទេ? (Chnganh te?)
builds onIs it delicious?