意思
Healthy eating habit.
文化背景
Fruits are an essential part of 'Naivedya' (offering to deities). A plate of cut fruits is often the first thing offered to God during daily prayers. In the Konkan, 'eating fruits' specifically implies eating mangoes, jackfruits, and cashews during the summer months. It's a seasonal highlight. Marathi culture follows the Ayurvedic rule of not eating fruits with milk (except for mangoes in 'Amras'). This influences how people talk about 'eating fruits'. In villages, 'eating fruits' often means eating what grows in the backyard—guavas, custard apples, or berries—rather than store-bought fruit.
Plural is Key
Always use the plural 'Phaḷē' when talking about the general habit of eating fruit.
The Retroflex L
Be careful with the 'L' in 'Phaḷē'. If you use a normal English 'L', it might be understood, but it won't sound native.
意思
Healthy eating habit.
Plural is Key
Always use the plural 'Phaḷē' when talking about the general habit of eating fruit.
The Retroflex L
Be careful with the 'L' in 'Phaḷē'. If you use a normal English 'L', it might be understood, but it won't sound native.
Cultural Context
Mentioning 'Amba' (Mango) when talking about 'Phaḷē khāṇē' will instantly make you more relatable to Marathi speakers.
Upvas Mention
If you are in Maharashtra during a festival, using this phrase in the context of 'Upvas' shows great cultural awareness.
自我测试
Fill in the blank with the correct form of the verb 'खाणे' for a male speaker.
मी रोज सकाळी फळे ______.
For a male speaker in the present habitual tense, 'खातो' is the correct form.
Which sentence correctly says 'I ate fruits' in the past tense?
Select the correct past tense sentence:
In the past tense, the verb 'खाणे' becomes 'खाल्ली' to agree with the neuter plural object 'फळे'.
Match the phrase to the correct context.
Context: A doctor giving advice to a patient.
This is the most appropriate health advice a doctor would give.
Complete the dialogue.
आई: राहुल, तू सफरचंद खाल्ले का? राहुल: नाही आई, मी आता ______.
The context implies a future action ('I will eat now').
🎉 得分: /4
视觉学习工具
Common Fruits to Eat in Maharashtra
Summer
- • आंबा (Mango)
- • कलिंगड (Watermelon)
Winter
- • पेरू (Guava)
- • बोर (Berries)
All Year
- • केळी (Banana)
- • पपई (Papaya)
练习题库
4 练习मी रोज सकाळी फळे ______.
For a male speaker in the present habitual tense, 'खातो' is the correct form.
Select the correct past tense sentence:
In the past tense, the verb 'खाणे' becomes 'खाल्ली' to agree with the neuter plural object 'फळे'.
Context: A doctor giving advice to a patient.
This is the most appropriate health advice a doctor would give.
आई: राहुल, तू सफरचंद खाल्ले का? राहुल: नाही आई, मी आता ______.
The context implies a future action ('I will eat now').
🎉 得分: /4
常见问题
10 个问题Yes, but it means 'I am eating a (specific) fruit' right now. For a general habit, 'मी फळे खातो' is better.
It is neutral. You can use it with friends, family, or doctors.
'Khāṇē' is to eat (anything), while 'Jēvaṇē' specifically means to have a full meal (lunch or dinner). You 'eat' (khāṇē) fruits, you don't 'meal' (jēvaṇē) them.
You say 'मला फळे खायला आवडते' (Malā phaḷē khāylā āvaḍatē).
Technically no, that would be 'Phaḷāñcā ras piṇē' (drinking fruit juice).
Marathi pluralizes 'Phal' (neuter) by changing the ending to 'ē'.
Yes, if you are ordering a fruit platter, you can say 'मला फळे खायची आहेत'.
Mangoes, bananas, grapes, pomegranates, and guavas.
Informally, people might say 'फळं हाणणे' (Phaḷaṃ hāṇṇē), but it's very casual.
The verb 'khāṇē' changes based on the speaker's gender in the present tense (khātō/khātē).
相关表达
फळांचा रस
similarFruit juice
फळ मिळणे
contrastTo get a result
फलाहार
specialized formFruit diet/fasting food
ताजी फळे
builds onFresh fruits
फळबाग
similarOrchard