Significado
To be exactly what is needed or desired; to be highly opportune.
Contexto cultural
In Spain, you will very frequently hear the variation 'venir al pelo.' It is slightly more informal but used in almost all the same contexts as 'anillo al dedo.' In Mexico, 'caer de perlas' is a very popular alternative. It sounds slightly more enthusiastic and is used frequently when receiving good news or favors. Argentines use 'venir al pelo' or 'venir de diez' (to come as a ten). 'Anillo al dedo' is understood and used, but 'de diez' is the go-to for something perfect. In Colombia, 'caer como anillo al dedo' is very common. It is often used in business and social settings to express that a proposal or a visit is very welcome.
Use it with 'le' for companies
In business, say 'Esta solución le viene como anillo al dedo a su empresa' to sound professional and persuasive.
Don't forget the pronoun
Saying just 'Viene como anillo al dedo' sounds like a robot. Always add 'me', 'te', 'le', etc.
Significado
To be exactly what is needed or desired; to be highly opportune.
Use it with 'le' for companies
In business, say 'Esta solución le viene como anillo al dedo a su empresa' to sound professional and persuasive.
Don't forget the pronoun
Saying just 'Viene como anillo al dedo' sounds like a robot. Always add 'me', 'te', 'le', etc.
Sarcasm alert
You can use it sarcastically for bad timing, but make sure your tone of voice makes it clear!
Past tense is common
You will use 'vino' (past) more often than 'viene' (present) because we usually talk about things that just happened.
Teste-se
Fill in the blank with the correct form of the verb 'venir' and the pronoun 'me'.
Este café ______ como anillo al dedo porque tengo mucho sueño.
The sentence is in the present tense and refers to 'me' (I am sleepy).
Which sentence uses the idiom correctly to describe a perfect job candidate?
How would you describe a candidate who has all the skills you need?
This uses the correct preposition 'al' and the correct verb 'venir' with the indirect object 'le' (for the company).
Complete the dialogue with the most natural response.
A: 'He encontrado un taxi justo cuando empezó a llover.' B: '_________________'
This correctly uses the past tense 'vino' and the pronoun 'te' to respond to the friend's luck.
Match the situation to the phrase.
You are writing a thesis and you find the exact book you needed in the trash.
'Venir como anillo al dedo' and 'Venir al pelo' are both appropriate for this situation.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Recursos visuais
Venir vs. Quedar
Banco de exercicios
4 exerciciosEste café ______ como anillo al dedo porque tengo mucho sueño.
The sentence is in the present tense and refers to 'me' (I am sleepy).
How would you describe a candidate who has all the skills you need?
This uses the correct preposition 'al' and the correct verb 'venir' with the indirect object 'le' (for the company).
A: 'He encontrado un taxi justo cuando empezó a llover.' B: '_________________'
This correctly uses the past tense 'vino' and the pronoun 'te' to respond to the friend's luck.
You are writing a thesis and you find the exact book you needed in the trash.
'Venir como anillo al dedo' and 'Venir al pelo' are both appropriate for this situation.
🎉 Pontuação: /4
Perguntas frequentes
10 perguntasThe standard idiom is 'como anillo al dedo' (no 'un'). Adding 'un' makes it sound literal rather than idiomatic.
Yes! If a new team member has exactly the skills you need, you can say 'Ella nos viene como anillo al dedo'.
It's neutral. You can use it with your boss or with your best friend. It's very safe.
There is no real difference in meaning. 'Caer' might sound slightly more accidental/lucky, while 'venir' is the most standard.
Technically yes, but it sounds a bit dramatic. 'Me queda bien' is much more natural for clothes.
Yes, it is universally understood from Spain to Argentina.
You can say 'No me vino nada bien' or 'No me vino como anillo al dedo precisamente'.
Yes, 'al dedo' is the fixed part of the phrase. You cannot change 'dedo' to 'mano' or 'pie'.
Yes, 'venir al pelo' is a very common synonym, especially in Spain, but it is more informal.
Yes. 'Este cambio nos vendrá como anillo al dedo' (This change will be perfect for us).
Frases relacionadas
Venir al pelo
synonymTo be perfect/opportune.
Caer de perlas
synonymTo be wonderful/timely.
Quedar como un guante
similarTo fit like a glove.
Ni pintado
similarPerfectly suited.