A1 Collocation Neutro

Dars boshlandi

Lesson started

Phrase in 30 Seconds

Use 'Dars boshlandi' to announce that a lesson or lecture has officially commenced in a school or university setting.

  • Means: The class has started (literally: lesson began).
  • Used in: Schools, online courses, and private tutoring sessions.
  • Don't confuse: Don't use 'boshladi' (active) when the class itself is the subject.
🏫 + 🔔 = 🤫 (School + Bell = Silence/Focus)

Explanation at your level:

This is a very simple phrase. 'Dars' means lesson. 'Boshlandi' means started. Use it when the bell rings at school. It helps you tell your friends to be quiet and start studying. It is one of the first things you hear in an Uzbek school.
At this level, you should notice the verb structure. 'Boshlandi' comes from 'bosh' (head). It is in the past tense. You use it to describe the daily routine of a student. You can also ask questions like 'Dars soat nechada boshlandi?' (What time did the class start?).
Intermediate learners should distinguish between 'boshladi' (he/she started) and 'boshlandi' (it started). This phrase is a perfect example of the intransitive verb form in Uzbek. It is used in narratives about education and personal growth. You might use it to describe the start of a new chapter in your studies.
Upper-intermediate learners can use this phrase in broader contexts, such as describing the commencement of academic semesters or formal training programs. You should be comfortable using it in the passive voice and understanding its role in complex sentences, such as 'Dars boshlangani sababli, biz ichkariga kirdik' (Because the class started, we went inside).
At an advanced level, you analyze the sociolinguistic implications of 'Dars boshlandi'. It serves as a pragmatic marker for authority and social order in Uzbek educational institutions. You can explore its usage in classical literature where 'dars' refers to spiritual instruction, and 'boshlandi' signifies the beginning of a transformative journey.
Mastery involves understanding the etymological convergence of the Persian-Arabic 'dars' and the Turkic 'boshlanmoq'. You can deconstruct the morphophonemic changes in the verb and discuss the aspectual nuances of the definite past tense '-di' versus the perfective '-gan'. You recognize the phrase as a cultural anchor in the 'Ustoz-Shogird' tradition.

Significado

The beginning of a class

🌍

Contexto cultural

Education is a communal event. When a class starts, it's not just about the subject, but about the relationship between the 'Ustoz' and 'Shogird'. The 'Chora' (bell) is a sacred sound in Uzbek schools, often rung manually by a student or janitor in older schools. Telegram is the primary tool for education. 'Dars boshlandi' is the most common notification received by millions of Uzbek students daily. Parents often ask their children 'Darsing boshlandimi?' not just to check the time, but to ensure they are focused and not playing.

💡

The 'N' Rule

Always include the 'n' in 'boshlandi' when the subject is the event itself. Without it, the sentence feels incomplete.

⚠️

Punctuality

In Uzbekistan, saying 'Dars boshlandi' when you are late is a serious apology starter. Use it with 'Kechirasiz'.

Significado

The beginning of a class

💡

The 'N' Rule

Always include the 'n' in 'boshlandi' when the subject is the event itself. Without it, the sentence feels incomplete.

⚠️

Punctuality

In Uzbekistan, saying 'Dars boshlandi' when you are late is a serious apology starter. Use it with 'Kechirasiz'.

🎯

Plurality

Even if you have many lessons, you can just say 'Dars boshlandi' to mean 'School has started for the day'.

💬

Respect

When you hear this phrase, it is polite to stop your conversation immediately, especially if an elder or teacher is present.

Teste-se

Fill in the correct form of the verb 'boshlanmoq'.

Qo'ng'iroq chalindi, dars ______.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: boshlandi

We use the past tense 'boshlandi' because the ringing of the bell indicates the start has already happened.

Which sentence is correct for a formal announcement?

Choose the best option:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Mashg'ulot boshlandi.

'Mashg'ulot' is the formal term for a lesson or session.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Kechirasiz, ______? B: Ha, kiring, endigina boshlandi.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: dars boshlandimi

The response 'Ha, kiring' (Yes, enter) implies the person was asking if they were late or if it had started.

Match the phrase to the situation.

Situation: You see your teacher entering the room and the bell rings.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Dars boshlandi

This is the standard announcement for the start of a class.

🎉 Pontuação: /4

Recursos visuais

Active vs Passive Start

Active (Boshladi)
O'qituvchi boshladi The teacher started
Passive (Boshlandi)
Dars boshlandi The class started

Perguntas frequentes

12 perguntas

No, use 'Majlis boshlandi' for meetings.

'Boshlandi' is past (started), 'boshlanadi' is future/present (starts/will start).

It is neutral and appropriate for all educational settings.

Dars hali boshlanmadi.

'Dars' is the standard modern word; 'saboq' is more traditional or literary.

Yes, if you are the teacher. It means 'I started the lesson'.

It means 'The class has already gotten well underway' (and you are quite late).

It is singular, but can represent the concept of 'schooling' in general.

Only at the beginning of a sentence.

Yes, 'Mashg'ulot boshlandi' is better, but 'Dars boshlandi' works too.

Students often just say 'Boshlandi!' or 'Domla kirdi!'.

Not literally, but it is the consequence of the bell ringing.

Frases relacionadas

🔗

Dars tugadi

contrast

The class has ended

🔗

Tanaffus boshlandi

similar

The break has started

🔗

O'qituvchi keldi

builds on

The teacher has come

🔗

Ma'ruza boshlandi

specialized form

The lecture has started

Onde usar

🔔

School Bell Rings

Student A: Qara, qo'ng'iroq chalindi!

Student B: Ha, dars boshlandi. Tezroq yur!

neutral
💻

Zoom Class

Teacher: Assalomu alaykum. Dars boshlandi.

Student: Assalomu alaykum, ustoz. Men tayyorman.

neutral
🏃

Arriving Late

Late Student: Dars boshlandimi?

Classmate: Ha, besh daqiqa bo'ldi.

informal
👨‍👩‍👧

Parent-Teacher Meeting

Director: Marhamat, o'tiringlar. Dars boshlandi.

Parent: Rahmat.

formal
📱

Telegram Group Notification

Bot/Admin: Diqqat! Ingliz tili darsi boshlandi.

User: Rahmat, hozir kiraman.

neutral
🌱

Life Lesson

Grandfather: Xato qildingmi? Endi dars boshlandi.

Grandson: Tushundim, bobo.

informal

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Dars sounds like 'Doors'. When the class starts, the doors close. Dars boshlandi!

Visual Association

Imagine a large golden bell ringing in a courtyard in Samarkand. As it rings, students in traditional robes sit down on colorful carpets. The sound of the bell is the 'boshlandi'.

Rhyme

Dars boshlandi, hamma quvondi (Class started, everyone was happy).

Story

A student named Davron is running to school. He hears the bell: 'Ding-dong!'. He gasps and says, 'Dars boshlandi!'. He enters the room just as the teacher opens the book. Now Davron is safe and learning.

Word Web

DarsO'qituvchiTalabaMaktabKitobQalamSinfBoshlamoq

Desafio

Next time you start a self-study session, say 'Dars boshlandi' out loud to set your focus.

In Other Languages

Spanish high

La clase ha empezado

Uzbek uses a specific intransitive verb form.

French high

Le cours a commencé

French doesn't have the 'head' (bosh) etymology for starting.

German moderate

Der Unterricht hat begonnen

German distinguishes between 'Klasse' (the group) and 'Unterricht' (the lesson).

Japanese high

授業が始まりました

Japanese requires a subject marker 'ga', whereas Uzbek uses the nominative.

Arabic high

بدأ الدرس

Uzbek is SOV (Subject-Object-Verb), so 'Dars' comes first.

Chinese partial

上课了

Chinese doesn't use a specific 'start' verb in this common idiom.

Korean high

수업이 시작되었습니다

Korean has much more complex honorific levels than Uzbek.

Portuguese high

A aula começou

Portuguese uses the simple past more frequently than the compound past for this.

Easily Confused

Dars boshlandi vs Dars boshladi

Learners forget the '-n-' suffix.

Remember: A lesson doesn't start things; it is the thing that starts. Use the 'n' for 'Neutral/Passive'.

Dars boshlandi vs Dars bo'ldi

Means 'The class happened' or 'The class was held'.

Use 'bo'ldi' to describe the past event, 'boshlandi' to describe the moment it began.

Perguntas frequentes (12)

No, use 'Majlis boshlandi' for meetings.

'Boshlandi' is past (started), 'boshlanadi' is future/present (starts/will start).

It is neutral and appropriate for all educational settings.

Dars hali boshlanmadi.

'Dars' is the standard modern word; 'saboq' is more traditional or literary.

Yes, if you are the teacher. It means 'I started the lesson'.

It means 'The class has already gotten well underway' (and you are quite late).

It is singular, but can represent the concept of 'schooling' in general.

Only at the beginning of a sentence.

Yes, 'Mashg'ulot boshlandi' is better, but 'Dars boshlandi' works too.

Students often just say 'Boshlandi!' or 'Domla kirdi!'.

Not literally, but it is the consequence of the bell ringing.

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