A1 Collocation 中性

Sooja saama

To get warm

意思

The act of warming up oneself.

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文化背景

The 'ahi' (stone stove) was traditionally the heart of the home. Families would sleep on top of it or next to it to 'sooja saama' during the coldest months. Sauna is the ultimate 'sooja saama' experience. It is common to jump into a frozen lake (taliujumine) and then run back to the sauna to get warm again. Hot alcoholic drinks like 'Glögi' (mulled wine) are sold at Christmas markets specifically for the purpose of 'sooja saama' while shopping. Woolen socks (villased sokid) are the unofficial national footwear for 'sooja saama' at home. Every Estonian grandmother is expected to knit them.

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The Partitive Rule

Always remember 'sooja' ends in 'a'. Using 'soe saama' sounds like you are becoming the concept of warmth itself!

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Hospitality

If someone invites you to 'sooja saama', it's a sign of care. It's polite to accept a warm drink even if you aren't very cold.

意思

The act of warming up oneself.

💡

The Partitive Rule

Always remember 'sooja' ends in 'a'. Using 'soe saama' sounds like you are becoming the concept of warmth itself!

💬

Hospitality

If someone invites you to 'sooja saama', it's a sign of care. It's polite to accept a warm drink even if you aren't very cold.

🎯

Sports Context

Use this phrase at the gym to sound like a local. 'Ma pean enne sooja saama' (I need to warm up first).

自我测试

Fill in the missing word in the partitive case.

Ma joon kuuma teed, et _____ saama.

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: sooja

The phrase is 'sooja saama'. 'Sooja' is the partitive form of 'soe'.

Which sentence is the most natural way to invite someone inside on a cold day?

Choose the best option:

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: Tule sisse sooja saama!

This is the standard idiomatic expression for hospitality in winter.

Match the Estonian phrase with its English context.

Match the following:

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: a

Each term has a specific use in Estonian temperature vocabulary.

Complete the dialogue.

A: Väljas on nii külm! B: Jah, mine _____, ma teen sulle teed.

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: tuppa sooja saama

The context of being cold outside leads naturally to going inside to get warm.

🎉 得分: /4

视觉学习工具

练习题库

4 练习
Fill in the missing word in the partitive case. Fill Blank A1

Ma joon kuuma teed, et _____ saama.

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: sooja

The phrase is 'sooja saama'. 'Sooja' is the partitive form of 'soe'.

Which sentence is the most natural way to invite someone inside on a cold day? Choose A1

Choose the best option:

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: Tule sisse sooja saama!

This is the standard idiomatic expression for hospitality in winter.

Match the Estonian phrase with its English context. Match A2

将左侧的每个项目与右侧的配对匹配:

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: a

Each term has a specific use in Estonian temperature vocabulary.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A1

A: Väljas on nii külm! B: Jah, mine _____, ma teen sulle teed.

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: tuppa sooja saama

The context of being cold outside leads naturally to going inside to get warm.

🎉 得分: /4

常见问题

5 个问题

Yes! 'Koer tuli tuppa sooja saama' is perfectly natural.

Both are used, but 'saama' is more common when expressing the purpose of an action (e.g., 'Tulin sooja saama').

No, that is 'päevitama'. 'Sooja saama' is only about temperature.

Rarely. It's mostly a winter/autumn phrase. In summer, you'd more likely say you are 'cooling down' (jahutama).

It's neutral. You can say it to your boss if you've both just come in from the cold.

相关表达

🔗

end soojendama

similar

to warm oneself up

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üles soojenema

similar

to warm up (thaw out)

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soojust ammutama

specialized form

to draw warmth from something

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külmetama

contrast

to be cold / to freeze

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