100 Daily Use English Sentences with Tamil meaning (Ep. 2)

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Daily Use English Sentences with Tamil meaning: நீங்கள் எளிய, தினசரி பயன்படுத்தும் வாக்கியங்களுடன் தொடங்கும்போது ஆங்கிலம் கற்பது மிகவும் எளிதாக இருக்கும்.

தமிழ் பேசுபவர்களுக்கு, தமிழில் உள்ள ஆங்கில வாக்கியங்களின் அர்த்தத்தைப் புரிந்துகொள்வது புரிந்துகொள்ளுதல் மற்றும் பேசும் திறனை கணிசமாக மேம்படுத்தும்.

பொதுவாக பயன்படுத்தப்படும் ஆங்கில வாக்கியங்களின் பட்டியல் அவற்றின் தமிழ் மொழிபெயர்ப்புகளுடன் கீழே

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Daily Use English Sentences with Tamil meaning

உணர்ச்சிவசப்படாதே
Don’t be emotional
(டோன்ட் பி இமோஷனல்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t be” is the negative imperative form used to give a command or advice. “Emotional” is an adjective describing someone who is easily affected by feelings.
Context: Used when advising someone to stay calm and not let feelings control their actions.
Example:
Coach: Stay focused during the match, don’t be emotional.

நீங்கள் கவனிக்கிறீர்களா ?
Are you listening?
(ஆர் யூ லிஸனிங்?)

Grammar Tip: “Are you” starts a present continuous question. “Listening” is the -ing form of “listen”, showing an ongoing action.
Context: Used to check if someone is paying attention during a conversation or lecture.
Example:
Teacher: Are you listening to the instructions?

என் கூட பேசாதே
Don’t talk to me
(டோன்ட் டாக் டு மீ)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is used for negative commands. “Talk to me” means to have a conversation with the speaker.
Context: Used when you are upset or angry and want to avoid communication.
Example:
Sibling: Please, don’t talk to me right now. I need some space.

எதற்கு எடுத்தாலும் அழாதே..!
Don’t cry for each and everything..!
(டோன்ட் கிரை ஃபார் ஈச் அண்ட் எவ்ரிதிங்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t cry” is a negative command. “For each and everything” means for every small issue.
Context: Used to advise someone to be strong and not get upset over minor things.
Example:
Parent: Try to be brave, don’t cry for each and everything.

முகத்தை கழுவு
Wash your face
(வாஷ் யோர் ஃபேஸ்)

Grammar Tip: “Wash” is an imperative verb (command). “Your face” is the object receiving the action.
Context: Commonly used in daily routines, especially after waking up or before meals.
Example:
Mother: Before breakfast, wash your face and hands.

உண்மையை சொல்லு
Tell me the truth
(டெல் மீ தி ட்ரூத்)

Grammar Tip: “Tell me” is a command. “The truth” is a noun phrase meaning the real facts.
Context: Used when you want someone to be honest about something.
Example:
Friend: Please, tell me the truth about what happened yesterday.

கொஞ்ச நாளைக்கு முன்னாடி
A few days ago
(அ ஃப்யூ டேஸ் அகோ)

Grammar Tip: “A few” means some but not many. “Days ago” refers to a time in the past.
Context: Used to talk about something that happened recently.
Example:
Colleague: I met him a few days ago at the market.

இருட்டு ஆயிட்டே இருக்கு
It’s getting dark
(இட்ஸ் கெட்டிங் டார்க்)

Grammar Tip: “It’s” is a contraction of “it is”. “Getting” shows a change in state. “Dark” is an adjective.
Context: Used when the evening is approaching and there is less daylight.
Example:
Traveler: Let’s hurry, it’s getting dark outside.

நீ என்னிடம் சொன்னாயா ?
Did you tell me?
(டிட் யூ டெல் மீ?)

Grammar Tip: “Did you” is used for past tense questions. “Tell me” asks if information was given to the speaker.
Context: Used to confirm if someone has already given you some information.
Example:
Manager: Did you tell me about the meeting yesterday?

நீ கோவமா இருக்கியா ?
Are you angry?
(ஆர் யூ ஆங்க்ரி?)

Grammar Tip: “Are you” forms a present simple question. “Angry” is an adjective describing emotion.
Context: Used to check if someone is upset or annoyed.
Example:
Child: Are you angry with me for breaking the vase?

உட்காருங்கள்
Be seated
(பி சீடெட்)

Grammar Tip: “Be seated” is a polite imperative, often used formally. “Seated” is the past participle of “seat,” used here as an adjective.
Context: Commonly used to invite someone to sit down, especially in formal or official situations.
Example:
Receptionist: Please be seated. The doctor will see you soon.

பொறாமைப்படாதே
Don’t be jealous
(டோன்ட் பி ஜெலஸ்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t be” is a negative command. “Jealous” is an adjective describing the feeling of envy.
Context: Used when advising someone not to feel envious of others’ success or possessions.
Example:
Friend: Don’t be jealous of her achievements; you will succeed too.

அது என்ன சத்தம் ?
What is that noise?
(வாட் இஸ் தாட் நாய்ஸ்?)

Grammar Tip: “What is” forms a question. “That noise” refers to a specific sound you are hearing.
Context: Used when you hear an unfamiliar or unexpected sound and want to know its source.
Example:
Child: What is that noise coming from the kitchen?

இது பாதுகாப்பானதா ?
Is it safe?
(இஸ் இட் சேஃப்?)

Grammar Tip: “Is it” starts a yes/no question. “Safe” is an adjective meaning not dangerous.
Context: Used to ask about the safety of a place, object, or action.
Example:
Tourist: Is it safe to drink the tap water here?

உனக்கு வெட்கமா இல்ல ?
Are you ashamed?
(ஆர் யூ அஷேம்ட்?)

Grammar Tip: “Are you” forms a present simple question. “Ashamed” is an adjective describing a feeling of guilt or embarrassment.
Context: Used to question someone’s sense of shame after inappropriate behavior.
Example:
Parent: Are you ashamed of what you did at school today?

என்னை தப்பா எடுத்துக்காத
Don’t mistake me
(டோன்ட் மிஸ்டேக் மீ)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Mistake me” means to misunderstand or misinterpret the speaker.
Context: Used when clarifying your intentions or words to prevent misunderstanding.
Example:
Colleague: Don’t mistake me, I was only trying to help.

அது நடந்து போகிற தூரம் தான்
It is a walkable distance
(இட் இஸ் அ வாக்கபிள் டிஸ்டன்ஸ்)

Grammar Tip: “It is” is the present simple form. “Walkable” is an adjective meaning possible to walk. “Distance” is a noun.
Context: Used to describe a place that is close enough to reach on foot.
Example:
Neighbor: The grocery store is a walkable distance from here.

நான் பேசுகிறது உனக்கு கேட்கிறதா ?
Can you hear me?
(கேன் யூ ஹியர் மீ?)

Grammar Tip: “Can you” is used for ability or possibility. “Hear me” means to perceive the speaker’s voice.
Context: Used during phone calls or in noisy places to check if the listener can hear you.
Example:
Video Call: Can you hear me clearly now?

என்ன நடக்குதுன்னு எனக்கு புரியல
I don’t understand what’s happening
(ஐ டோன்ட் அண்டர்ஸ்டாண்ட் வாட்ஸ் ஹப்பனிங்)

Grammar Tip: “I don’t understand” is present simple negative. “What’s happening” is a present continuous clause describing the ongoing situation.
Context: Used when you are confused by events or situations.
Example:
Student: I don’t understand what’s happening in this math problem.

எனக்கு உங்க உதவி இல்லை
I don’t need your help
(ஐ டோன்ட் நீட் யோர் ஹெல்ப்)

Grammar Tip: “I don’t need” is a negative statement. “Your help” is the object, referring to assistance from the listener.
Context: Used to politely refuse someone’s offer to assist.
Example:
Colleague: Thank you, but I don’t need your help with this task.

நீ ஏன் இப்படி இருக்கிறாய் ?
Why are you like this?
(வை ஆர் யூ லைக் திஸ்?)

Grammar Tip: “Why are you” is used to ask for reasons about someone’s behavior or condition. “Like this” refers to the current manner or state of the person.
Context: Used when questioning someone’s unusual or unexpected behavior.
Example:
Mother: Why are you like this today? You seem very quiet.

மழை பெய்யலாம்
It may rain
(இட் மே ரெய்ன்)

Grammar Tip: “May” is a modal verb indicating possibility. “It” refers to the weather, and “rain” is the verb.
Context: Used when predicting or warning about possible rain.
Example:
Friend: Take an umbrella with you, it may rain later.

உனக்காக நான் அதை செய்வேன்
I will do it for you
(ஐ வில் டூ இட் ஃபார் யூ)

Grammar Tip: “Will” is used for future intentions. “Do it” means to perform an action, and “for you” shows the action is for the listener’s benefit.
Context: Used to offer help or promise to do something for someone.
Example:
Sibling: Don’t worry about the dishes, I will do it for you.

உங்களுக்கு என்ன வேணும் ?
What do you want?
(வாட் டூ யூ வாண்ட்?)

Grammar Tip: “What do you want” is a direct question. “Want” is the base verb, asking about preference or need.
Context: Used to ask someone about their needs or desires, often in shops or while offering help.
Example:
Shopkeeper: Welcome! What do you want?

விளையாட்டுத்தனமாக இருக்காதே
Don’t be playful
(டோன்ட் பி பிளேஃஃபுல்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t be” is a negative command. “Playful” is an adjective meaning light-hearted or not serious.
Context: Used when asking someone to be serious, usually in important situations.
Example:
Teacher: Don’t be playful during the exam, focus on your answers.

பயப்படாதே
Don’t be afraid
(டோன்ட் பி அஃப்ரெய்ட்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t be” is a negative imperative. “Afraid” is an adjective describing fear.
Context: Used to comfort someone who is scared or nervous.
Example:
Parent: Don’t be afraid of the dark, I am here with you.

மற்றவர்களை பற்றி குறை பேசாதே
Don’t criticize others
(டோன்ட் கிரிடிசைஸ் அதர்ஸ்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” makes it a negative command. “Criticize” is a verb meaning to find fault. “Others” refers to other people.
Context: Used to advise someone to avoid speaking negatively about people.
Example:
Mentor: Don’t criticize others; focus on improving yourself.

எனக்கு தாகமாக இருக்கிறது
I am thirsty
(ஐ எம் தர்ஸ்டி)

Grammar Tip: “I am” is the present simple form. “Thirsty” is an adjective describing the need for water.
Context: Used to express the need or desire for a drink.
Example:
Hiker: After walking so far, I am thirsty.

தயங்காதே
Don’t hesitate
(டோன்ட் ஹெசிடேட்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Hesitate” is a verb meaning to pause before doing something, usually because of uncertainty.
Context: Used to encourage someone to act confidently or ask questions without fear.
Example:
Manager: Don’t hesitate to contact me if you need help.

நாங்கள் நல்ல நண்பர்கள்
We are good friends
(வி ஆர் குட் ஃப்ரெண்ட்ஸ்)

Grammar Tip: “We are” is present simple tense. “Good friends” is a noun phrase describing a close and positive relationship.
Context: Used to describe a strong bond between two or more people.
Example:
Student: We are good friends; we always help each other.

உன் தவறை நியாயப்படுத்தாதே
Don’t justify your mistakes
(டோன்ட் ஜஸ்டிஃபை யோர் மிஸ்டேக்ஸ்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is used for negative commands. “Justify” is a verb meaning to give reasons for something to make it seem right. “Your mistakes” refers to the errors made by the listener.
Context: Used when advising someone to accept their faults instead of making excuses.
Example:
Teacher: Don’t justify your mistakes; learn from them and improve.

நான் உன்னை நம்புகிறேன்
I trust you
(ஐ ட்ரஸ்ட் யூ)

Grammar Tip: “I trust” is present simple tense, showing confidence. “You” is the object pronoun referring to the listener.
Context: Used to express confidence in someone’s honesty or abilities.
Example:
Friend: I trust you with my secrets.

நான் உன்னை நம்ப மாட்டேன்
I won’t trust you
(ஐ வோன்ட் ட்ரஸ்ட் யூ)

Grammar Tip: “Won’t” is the contraction of “will not,” used for future negative. “Trust you” means to have confidence in the listener.
Context: Used to express a lack of confidence in someone, usually because of past actions.
Example:
Colleague: If you lie again, I won’t trust you anymore.

அதை தொலைத்துவிடாதே
Don’t lose it
(டோன்ட் லூஸ் இட்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Lose” is a verb meaning to misplace or fail to keep something.
Context: Used when reminding someone to be careful with an object or possession.
Example:
Parent: Here’s your ticket. Don’t lose it!

எனக்கு அது பிடிக்கல
I don’t like it
(ஐ டோன்ட் லைக் இட்)

Grammar Tip: “I don’t like” is present simple negative. “It” refers to the object or situation being discussed.
Context: Used to express dislike or lack of preference for something.
Example:
Child: I don’t like it when it’s too noisy.

என்னை நச்சரிக்காதே
Don’t pester me
(டோன்ட் பெஸ்டர் மீ)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Pester” is a verb meaning to annoy someone repeatedly.
Context: Used when you want someone to stop bothering or irritating you.
Example:
Sibling: Don’t pester me while I’m studying.

வெட்கப்படாதே
Don’t be shy
(டோன்ட் பி ஷை)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t be” is a negative imperative. “Shy” is an adjective describing someone who is timid or nervous in social situations.
Context: Used to encourage someone to be more confident, especially in new situations.
Example:
Teacher: Don’t be shy, just introduce yourself to the class.

வதந்தி பேசாதே
Don’t gossip
(டோன்ட் காசிப்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Gossip” is a verb meaning to talk about other people’s private lives.
Context: Used to advise someone not to spread rumors or talk unnecessarily about others.
Example:
Manager: Don’t gossip at work, focus on your tasks instead.

நீ எப்ப வந்த ?
When did you come?
(வேன் டிட் யூ கம்?)

Grammar Tip: “When did you” is used to ask about the time of a past action. “Come” is the base form of the verb.
Context: Used to inquire about the time someone arrived.
Example:
Friend: When did you come to the party?

என்னை பற்றி மோசமாக பேசாதே
Don’t speak ill of me
(டோன்ட் ஸ்பீக் இல் ஆஃப் மீ)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Speak ill of” is a phrase meaning to say bad things about someone.
Context: Used to request someone not to say negative things about you to others.
Example:
Colleague: Please don’t speak ill of me behind my back.

நீ நாளைக்கு வர மாட்டியா ?
Won’t you come tomorrow?
(வோன்ட் யூ கம் டுமாரோ?)

Grammar Tip: “Won’t” is the contraction of “will not” and is used for negative future questions. “You come tomorrow” asks about the listener’s plans for the next day.
Context: Used to confirm if someone is not planning to come the following day.
Example:
Friend: Won’t you come tomorrow for the picnic?

ஒத்தி வைக்காதே
Don’t postpone
(டோன்ட் போஸ்ட் போன்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Postpone” is a verb meaning to delay something to a later time.
Context: Used to encourage someone to do things on time and not delay.
Example:
Teacher: Don’t postpone your assignments, finish them today.

நீ ஏன் சிரிக்கிறாய் ?
Why do you laugh?
(வை டூ யூ லாஃஃப்?)

Grammar Tip: “Why do you” is used to ask about reasons for a present habit or action. “Laugh” is the base verb.
Context: Used to ask someone the reason for their laughter, especially if it seems out of place.
Example:
Parent: Why do you laugh during serious discussions?

அவசரப்படாதே
Don’t rush
(டோன்ட் ரஷ்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Rush” is a verb meaning to hurry or do something quickly.
Context: Used to advise someone to take their time and not act too quickly.
Example:
Coach: Don’t rush your answers, think before you speak.

நம்ம மறுபடியும் பார்ப்போம்
We will meet again
(வி வில் மீட் அகேன்)

Grammar Tip: “We will” is future tense. “Meet again” means to see each other another time.
Context: Used when parting from someone, expressing hope or certainty of meeting in the future.
Example:
Colleague: Don’t worry, we will meet again at the next conference.

நடிக்காதே
Don’t pretend
(டோன்ட் ப்ரிடெண்ட்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Pretend” is a verb meaning to act as if something is true when it is not.
Context: Used to tell someone to be genuine and not fake their feelings or actions.
Example:
Friend: Don’t pretend to be happy if you’re not.

யாரோ உன்னை கூப்பிடறாங்க
Someone is calling you
(ஸம்வன் இஸ் காலிங் யூ)

Grammar Tip: “Someone” is an indefinite pronoun meaning an unknown person. “Is calling you” is present continuous tense.
Context: Used to let someone know that another person is trying to get their attention.
Example:
Colleague: Someone is calling you from the reception.

என்னை புறக்கணிக்காதே
Don’t ignore me
(டோன்ட் இக்னோர் மீ)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Ignore” is a verb meaning to pay no attention to someone or something.
Context: Used to ask someone not to neglect or overlook you, especially in conversation or relationships.
Example:
Child: Don’t ignore me when I’m talking to you.

நீ வாட்ஸப் யூஸ் பண்றியா ?
Do you use WhatsApp?
(டூ யூ யூஸ் வாட்ஸ்அப்?)

Grammar Tip: “Do you” is used for present simple questions. “Use WhatsApp” asks if the person uses the WhatsApp application.
Context: Used to ask if someone is active on a particular messaging platform.
Example:
Friend: Do you use WhatsApp to stay in touch?

நீ பேஸ்புக் யூஸ் பண்றியா ?
Do you use Facebook?
(டூ யூ யூஸ் பேஸ்புக்?)

Grammar Tip: “Do you” is a present simple question. “Use Facebook” asks if the person is active on Facebook.
Context: Used to ask about someone’s presence on the Facebook social media platform.
Example:
Colleague: Do you use Facebook to share your photos?

பிடிவாதமாக இருக்காதே
Don’t be adamant
(டோன்ட் பி அடமண்ட்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t be” is a negative imperative. “Adamant” is an adjective meaning refusing to change your mind or opinion.
Context: Used to advise someone to be flexible and open-minded instead of stubborn.
Example:
Parent: Don’t be adamant, try to listen to others’ suggestions.

என்னால காத்திருக்க முடியாது
I can’t wait
(ஐ காண்ட் வைட்)

Grammar Tip: “Can’t” is the contraction of “cannot,” expressing inability. “Wait” is the verb, meaning to stay in place or delay action.
Context: Used when you are unable or unwilling to wait any longer.
Example:
Friend: I can’t wait for the movie to start, I’m too excited!

என்னால காத்திருக்க முடியும்
I can wait
(ஐ கேன் வைட்)

Grammar Tip: “Can” expresses ability. “Wait” is the verb, meaning to remain in place until something happens.
Context: Used to show patience and willingness to wait for someone or something.
Example:
Customer: No problem, I can wait for my order.

என்னை தொந்தரவு பண்ணாதே
Don’t bother me
(டோன்ட் பாதர் மீ)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Bother” is a verb meaning to disturb or annoy.
Context: Used to ask someone to leave you alone, especially when you need peace or concentration.
Example:
Student: Don’t bother me while I’m doing my homework.

நீ ஏன் சோகமாக இருக்கிறாய் ?
Why are you upset?
(வை ஆர் யூ அப்செட்?)

Grammar Tip: “Why are you” is used to ask for the reason. “Upset” is an adjective meaning unhappy or worried.
Context: Used to inquire about someone’s sadness or emotional discomfort.
Example:
Friend: Why are you upset? Did something happen at work?

உளறாதே
Don’t babble
(டோன்ட் பேபிள்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Babble” is a verb meaning to talk rapidly and continuously in a foolish, excited, or incomprehensible way.
Context: Used to ask someone to stop talking nonsense or speaking without making sense.
Example:
Teacher: Don’t babble during the lesson, pay attention!

சுடு தண்ணீர் குடி
Drink hot water
(டிரிங் ஹாட் வாட்டர்)

Grammar Tip: “Drink” is an imperative verb (command). “Hot water” is the noun phrase, specifying what to drink.
Context: Used as advice, often for health reasons or when someone is sick.
Example:
Grandparent: Drink hot water if you have a sore throat.

முணுமுணுக்காதே
Don’t murmur
(டோன்ட் மர்்மர்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Murmur” is a verb meaning to speak in a low, unclear voice.
Context: Used to tell someone not to complain quietly or speak unclearly.
Example:
Supervisor: Don’t murmur, speak clearly if you have a problem.

நீ கிளம்புறியா ?
Are you leaving?
(ஆர் யூ லீவிங்?)

Grammar Tip: “Are you” is used for present continuous questions. “Leaving” is the -ing form of “leave,” meaning to go away from a place.
Context: Used to ask if someone is about to go or depart from the current place.
Example:
Colleague: Are you leaving the office now?

அவளை சந்தேகப்படாதே
Don’t suspect her
(டோன்ட் சஸ்பெக்ட் ஹர்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Suspect” is a verb meaning to doubt or mistrust someone. “Her” is the object pronoun.
Context: Used to advise someone not to doubt a woman’s intentions or actions.
Example:
Friend: Don’t suspect her, she’s telling the truth.

நீ இதை எப்ப வாங்குன ?
When did you buy it?
(வேன் டிட் யூ பை இட்?)

Grammar Tip: “When did you” is used to ask about the time of a past action. “Buy” is the base form of the verb, used after “did.”
Context: Used to ask someone when they purchased a particular item.
Example:
Friend: When did you buy it? It looks new.

உன்னிடம் பணம் இருந்தால் கொடு
If you have money, give it
(இஃப் யூ ஹேவ் மணி, கிவ் இட்)

Grammar Tip: “If you have” is a conditional clause. “Give it” is an imperative, telling the listener to hand over the money.
Context: Used when requesting money from someone, often in a casual or urgent situation.
Example:
Sibling: If you have money, give it to me for the bus fare.

என்னால விளக்க முடியாது
I can’t explain
(ஐ காண்ட் எக்ஸ்ப்ளேன்)

Grammar Tip: “Can’t” is the contraction of “cannot,” showing inability. “Explain” is a verb meaning to make something clear or easy to understand.
Context: Used when you are unable to describe or clarify something.
Example:
Student: I can’t explain how I solved the puzzle, it just happened!

நீ வரும் வரை நான் காத்திருப்பேன்
I will wait till you come
(ஐ வில் வைட் டில் யூ கம்)

Grammar Tip: “Will wait” is future tense. “Till you come” is a time clause indicating how long the action will continue.
Context: Used to assure someone that you will stay until they arrive.
Example:
Friend: Don’t worry, I will wait till you come to the station.

நீதான் பொறுப்பு
You are responsible
(யூ ஆர் ரெஸ்பான்சிபிள்)

Grammar Tip: “You are” is present simple. “Responsible” is an adjective meaning having a duty to deal with something or being accountable.
Context: Used to state that someone has the duty or obligation for something.
Example:
Manager: You are responsible for locking the office every night.

எவ்வளவு?
How much?
(ஹௌ மச்?)

Grammar Tip: “How much” is used to ask about quantity or price, especially with uncountable nouns or money.
Context: Used when asking about the cost of something or the amount of something uncountable.
Example:
Customer: How much does this shirt cost?

எத்தனை ?
How many?
(ஹௌ மேனி?)

Grammar Tip: “How many” is used to ask about the number of countable items.
Context: Used to inquire about the quantity of things that can be counted.
Example:
Teacher: How many students are present today?

இன்று என்னுடைய பிறந்தநாள்
Today is my birthday
(டுடே இஸ் மை பர்த்டே)

Grammar Tip: “Today is” is present simple. “My birthday” is a noun phrase indicating the anniversary of your birth.
Context: Used to announce or share that it is your birthday.
Example:
Child: Today is my birthday, and I’m having a party!

நான் நன்றாக இல்லை
I am not feeling well
(ஐ எம் நாட் ஃபீலிங் வெல்)

Grammar Tip: “I am not” is present simple negative. “Feeling well” means to be in good health or spirits.
Context: Used to express that you are sick or unwell.
Example:
Employee: I am not feeling well, so I’ll take a day off.

நான் வீட்டிற்கு வந்து விட்டேன்
I reached home
(ஐ ரீச்ச்ட் ஹோம்)

Grammar Tip: “Reached” is the past tense of “reach,” meaning to arrive. “Home” is the destination.
Context: Used to inform someone that you have arrived at your house.
Example:
Traveler: I reached home safely after the long journey.

உங்களுக்கு தெரியுமா ?
Do you know?
(டூ யூ நோ?)

Grammar Tip: “Do you” is used for present simple questions. “Know” is the verb, meaning to be aware of or have information about something.
Context: Used to ask if someone has knowledge or information about a topic.
Example:
Colleague: Do you know where the meeting will be held?

உங்களுக்கு என்ன வேணும் ?
What do you want?
(வாட் டூ யூ வாண்ட்?)

Grammar Tip: “What do you want” is a direct question. “Want” is a verb asking about a desire or preference.
Context: Used to ask about someone’s needs or wishes, often in shops or restaurants.
Example:
Waiter: What do you want to order for lunch?

உன்னால் இதை செய்ய முடியுமா?
Can you do it?
(கேன் யூ டூ இட்?)

Grammar Tip: “Can you” is used to ask about ability. “Do it” means to perform the task or action.
Context: Used to check if someone is able or willing to do something.
Example:
Boss: Can you do it before the deadline?

உன்னால் இதை செய்ய முடியும்
You can do it
(யூ கேன் டூ இட்)

Grammar Tip: “You can” expresses ability or encouragement. “Do it” refers to completing a task.
Context: Used to motivate or reassure someone that they are capable.
Example:
Coach: Don’t give up! You can do it!

நேரத்துடன் வா
Come early
(கம் எர்லி)

Grammar Tip: “Come” is an imperative verb (command). “Early” is an adverb describing time.
Context: Used to request someone to arrive before the scheduled time.
Example:
Teacher: Please come early to class tomorrow.

இந்த வழியில் வாங்க
Come this way
(கம் திஸ் வே)

Grammar Tip: “Come” is an imperative verb. “This way” is a phrase indicating direction.
Context: Used to guide someone to follow you or move in a particular direction.
Example:
Guide: Come this way, I’ll show you your seat.

நீ எனக்கு போன் செய்தாயா?
Did you call me?
(டிட் யூ கால்மீ?)

Grammar Tip: “Did you” is used for past simple questions. “Call me” means to contact by phone.
Context: Used to check if someone tried to contact you via phone.
Example:
Mother: Did you call me in the afternoon?

நீங்கள் எங்கே இருந்து வருகிறீர்கள் ?
Where are you coming from?
(வேர் ஆர் யூ கமிங் ஃப்ரம்?)

Grammar Tip: “Where are you” is a present continuous question. “Coming from” asks about the place someone has just left.
Context: Used to ask someone about their previous location or origin.
Example:
Security: Where are you coming from?

எனக்கு வேண்டாம்
I don’t want
(ஐ டோன்ட் வாண்ட்)

Grammar Tip: “I don’t want” is present simple negative. “Want” is the verb expressing desire or preference.
Context: Used to refuse or decline an offer or suggestion.
Example:
Friend: I don’t want any dessert, thank you.

நான் கொஞ்சம் பிஸியாகி விட்டேன்
I got a little busy
(ஐ காட் அ லிட்டில் பிஸி)

Grammar Tip: “Got” is the past tense of “get,” used here to show a change of state. “A little busy” means somewhat occupied.
Context: Used to explain why you were unavailable or unable to do something.
Example:
Colleague: Sorry for the late reply, I got a little busy at work.

மனதில் வைத்துக் கொள்ளாதே
Don’t take it to heart
(டோன்ட் டேக் இட் டூ ஹார்ட்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative imperative. “Take it to heart” is an idiom meaning to be deeply affected or upset by something.
Context: Used to advise someone not to be overly sensitive or upset by criticism or harsh words.
Example:
Friend: Don’t take it to heart if someone criticizes your work.

உங்களுக்கு உதவுறதுல சந்தோஷம்
I am happy to help you
(ஐ எம் ஹாப்பி டு ஹெல்ப் யூ)

Grammar Tip: “I am happy” is present simple tense expressing emotion. “To help you” is an infinitive phrase showing purpose.
Context: Used to express willingness and pleasure in assisting someone.
Example:
Colleague: I am happy to help you with your project anytime.

அதைப் பற்றி கவலைப்பட வேண்டாம்
Don’t worry about that
(டோன்ட் வரி அபௌட் தாட்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Worry about” is a phrasal verb meaning to feel anxious. “That” refers to a specific issue or problem.
Context: Used to reassure someone that a particular issue is not serious or important.
Example:
Parent: Don’t worry about that mistake, everyone makes them.

எனக்கு இதெல்லாம் பழகிப் போச்சு
I am used to it
(ஐ எம் யூஸ்ட் டு இட்)

Grammar Tip: “I am used to” is a phrase meaning you have become familiar with something. “It” refers to the situation or thing in question.
Context: Used to say that something is no longer new or difficult because of experience.
Example:
Student: I am used to waking up early for classes now.

நான் இப்ப போகணும்
I have to go now
(ஐ ஹேவ் டு கோ நௌ)

Grammar Tip: “Have to” expresses necessity or obligation. “Go now” means to leave at this moment.
Context: Used to politely indicate that you need to leave immediately.
Example:
Friend: I have to go now, my bus is here.

என்னை கோபப்படுத்தாதே
Don’t make me angry
(டோன்ட் மேக் மீ ஆங்க்ரி)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Make me angry” means to cause the speaker to feel anger.
Context: Used to warn someone not to provoke or irritate you.
Example:
Sibling: Don’t make me angry by teasing me!

சாக்கு போக்கு சொல்லாதே
Don’t make excuse
(டோன்ட் மேக் எக்ஸ்க்யூஸ்)

Grammar Tip: “Don’t” is a negative command. “Make excuses” is a phrase meaning to give reasons to avoid blame or responsibility.
Context: Used when telling someone to stop avoiding responsibility by giving reasons.
Example:
Coach: Don’t make excuses, just do your best.

என்னால அவனை மன்னிக்க முடியாது
I can’t forgive him
(ஐ காண்ட் ஃபர்கிவ் ஹிம்)

Grammar Tip: “Can’t” is the contraction of “cannot,” showing inability. “Forgive” is a verb meaning to stop feeling angry about an offense. “Him” is the object pronoun.
Context: Used when expressing that you are unable to pardon someone for what they did.
Example:
Friend: I can’t forgive him for what he said to me.

இது உன் தவறு இல்லை
It’s not your fault
(இட்ஸ் நாட் யோர் ஃபால்ட்)

Grammar Tip: “It’s” is the contraction of “it is.” “Not your fault” means you are not to blame.
Context: Used to reassure someone that they are not responsible for a problem or mistake.
Example:
Colleague: Don’t worry, it’s not your fault the project was delayed.

நான் என்ன சொல்றேன்னு கவனமா கேளு
Pay attention to what I say
(பேய் அட்டென்ஷன் டு வாட் ஐ சே)

Grammar Tip: “Pay attention” is an imperative phrase meaning to listen or focus carefully. “To what I say” specifies the object of attention.
Context: Used to instruct someone to listen carefully to your words or instructions.
Example:
Teacher: Pay attention to what I say before starting the experiment.

ஏதாவது செய்
Do something
(டூ சம்திங்)

Grammar Tip: “Do” is an imperative verb, used to give a command. “Something” is an indefinite pronoun referring to any action or task.
Context: Used to encourage someone to take action instead of staying idle.
Example:
Parent: Don’t just sit there, do something useful!

எனக்கு எதுவும் வேண்டாம்
I want nothing
(ஐ வாண்ட் நதிங்)

Grammar Tip: “I want” is present simple. “Nothing” is a pronoun meaning not anything.
Context: Used to politely refuse all offers or indicate you have no desires or needs.
Example:
Guest: Thank you, I want nothing right now.

பாயை மடி
Fold the mat
(ஃபோல்ட் தி மேட்)

Grammar Tip: “Fold” is an imperative verb. “The mat” is the object, referring to a piece of material used for sitting or sleeping.
Context: Used when asking someone to neatly fold a mat after use, often at home or in gatherings.
Example:
Mother: Fold the mat after you finish your yoga practice.

எனக்கு இந்த கலர் பிடிக்கும்
I like this colour
(ஐ லைக் திஸ் கலர்)

Grammar Tip: “I like” is present simple. “This colour” is the object, indicating a specific color you prefer.
Context: Used to express your preference for a particular color, often while shopping or choosing items.
Example:
Friend: I like this colour for my new dress.

இன்று வெள்ளிக்கிழமை
Today is Friday
(டுடே இஸ் ஃப்ரைடே)

Grammar Tip: “Today is” is present simple. “Friday” is a proper noun, naming the day of the week.
Context: Used to state the current day, often to make plans or discuss schedules.
Example:
Teacher: Today is Friday, so we have a test.

இப்ப நீ எங்க போற?
Where do you go now?
(வேர் டூ யூ கோ நௌ?)

Grammar Tip: “Where do you go” is a present simple question. “Now” indicates the present moment.
Context: Used to ask someone about their immediate destination or next activity.
Example:
Friend: Where do you go now after school?

நான் உனக்காக அதை செய்வேன்
I will do it for you
(ஐ வில் டூ இட் ஃபார் யூ)

Grammar Tip: “Will do” is future tense, expressing intention. “For you” shows the action is for the listener’s benefit.
Context: Used to offer help or promise to complete a task for someone.
Example:
Sibling: Don’t worry, I will do it for you.

நான் அந்த அர்த்தத்துல சொல்லல
I don’t mean it
(ஐ டோன்ட் மீன் இட்)

Grammar Tip: “I don’t mean” is present simple negative. “It” refers to a previous statement or action.
Context: Used to clarify that your words or actions were not intended to offend or hurt.
Example:
Friend: Sorry if I upset you, I don’t mean it that way.

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