意思
Tiring of a person or thing.
文化背景
Georgians are famous for not letting guests leave. Using 'თავი არ მოგაბეზრეთ' is a way for the guest to test if the host actually wants them to stay longer. In Tbilisi, young people often replace this idiom with 'ტვინის ბურღვა' (brain drilling) when talking about parents or teachers. Classical Georgian literature often uses this phrase to describe the 'ennui' of the upper class in the 19th century.
The 'I hope' trick
Always use 'იმედია, თავი არ მოგაბეზრეთ' at the end of a long email or speech. It makes you sound very native and humble.
Don't be too blunt
Telling someone 'თავი მომაბეზრე' is a quick way to end a friendship. Use it only when you are truly angry.
意思
Tiring of a person or thing.
The 'I hope' trick
Always use 'იმედია, თავი არ მოგაბეზრეთ' at the end of a long email or speech. It makes you sound very native and humble.
Don't be too blunt
Telling someone 'თავი მომაბეზრე' is a quick way to end a friendship. Use it only when you are truly angry.
The Supra Rule
At a Georgian feast, if you are the Tamada (toastmaster), be careful not to 'bore the head' of the guests with toasts that are too long.
自我测试
Fill in the missing word in the phrase: 'ამ წვიმამ თავი _______.'
ამ წვიმამ თავი _______.
For weather or repetitive situations, 'მომაბეზრა' is the most natural idiom.
Which phrase is the most polite way to say 'I hope I didn't bore you'?
Which is most polite?
'შეგაწყინეთ' is the formal/polite version of 'მოგაბეზრეთ'.
Match the phrase to the situation.
Situation: A friend has been talking about their cat for 3 hours.
The friend is the one doing the annoying (boring your head) by talking about the cat.
🎉 得分: /3
视觉学习工具
Boredom vs. Annoyance
练习题库
3 练习ამ წვიმამ თავი _______.
For weather or repetitive situations, 'მომაბეზრა' is the most natural idiom.
Which is most polite?
'შეგაწყინეთ' is the formal/polite version of 'მოგაბეზრეთ'.
Situation: A friend has been talking about their cat for 3 hours.
The friend is the one doing the annoying (boring your head) by talking about the cat.
🎉 得分: /3
常见问题
10 个问题Yes, if said directly to someone. It's better to say it about a situation or use the polite 'shetsqena' form.
Absolutely. 'ამ სიმღერამ თავი მომაბეზრა' is perfect for that.
'Mobezreba' is neutral/informal. 'Shetsqena' is formal and more polite.
თავი მოგვაბეზრა (He bored us).
No, use 'mtkiva' for pain. This is only for mental annoyance.
Yes, 'ტვინის ბურღვა' (brain drilling) is the most common slang equivalent.
In this idiom, yes. You can say 'მომბეზრდა' (I'm bored of it) without 'Tavi', but 'თავის მობეზრება' is the full idiomatic expression.
Yes, 'ამ წიგნმა თავი მომაბეზრა' means the book was too long or repetitive.
Only in the polite reflexive form: 'I hope I'm not boring you with these details.'
Usually Nominative (თავი) when it's the thing 'doing' the boring in the resultative sense.
相关表达
ყელში ამოსვლა
similarTo be sick and tired of something
თავის შეწყენა
specialized formTo trouble someone
მოწყენა
builds onTo be bored
გაბრაზება
contrastTo get angry