Dialogue

Vocabulary

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Lesson Notes

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Matt: Hello and welcome back to BulgarianPod101.com. This is Beginner, season 1, lesson 19 - Learning How to Make a Pizza in Bulgaria. My name is Matt.
Tina: Hello. And I’m Tina!
Matt: In this lesson, you'll learn how to form the definite article in Bulgarian.
Tina: The conversation takes place at a pizzeria.
Matt: It’s between Kiril and his boss.
Tina: They use informal speech, which is typical for a working environment like this.
Matt: Okay, let’s listen to the conversation.

Lesson conversation

Началник: И така, първо слагаш основните съставки...
Кирил: Добре...
Началник: После добавяш настъргания кашкавал...
Кирил: А соста?
Началник: Сосът? Сосът се слага най-накрая, по желание на клиента.
Кирил: Разбрано.
Matt: Let’s hear the conversation one time slowly.
Началник: И така, първо слагаш основните съставки...
Кирил: Добре...
Началник: После добавяш настъргания кашкавал...
Кирил: А соста?
Началник: Сосът? Сосът се слага най-накрая, по желание на клиента.
Кирил: Разбрано.
Matt: Now let’s hear it with the English translation.
Началник: И така, първо слагаш основните съставки...
Matt: So first you put on the main ingredients...
Кирил: Добре...
Matt: OK...
Началник: После добавяш настъргания кашкавал...
Matt: Then you add the grated cheese...
Кирил: А соста?
Matt: And the sauce?
Началник: Сосът? Сосът се слага най-накрая, по желание на клиента.
Matt: The sauce? The sauce is put on at the end, by the customer's request.
Кирил: Разбрано.
Matt: Understood.
POST CONVERSATION BANTER
Matt: In this dialogue, Kiril and his boss were having a conversation while working. Tina, what are work relationships like in Bulgaria?
Tina: For part-timers, these kinds of work relationships are more free than those in a corporate office among full time staff. But on the other hand, there’s less responsibility to the job.
Tina: In the conversation, you can sense that Kiril’s boss is quite strict and uses very direct words to describe what Kiril must do.
Matt: But they also speak using informal language.
Tina: That's right - it’s common in Bulgaria. In a more formal situation, at a big company or a governmental institution, people would usually use formal language and address each other using family names.
Matt: Among colleagues who are friends though, first names are usually used.
Tina: That’s right. Trust and support are very highly valued among Bulgarians, so work colleagues often hang out together outside of work and go on team-building trips.
Matt: Okay, now let’s move on to the vocab.
VOCAB LIST
Matt: Let's take a look at the vocabulary for this lesson.
: The first word we shall see is:
Tina: основен [natural native speed]
Matt: basic, main
Tina: основен [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: основен [natural native speed]
: Next:
Tina: съставка [natural native speed]
Matt: ingredient
Tina: съставка [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: съставка [natural native speed]
: Next:
Tina: добавям [natural native speed]
Matt: to add
Tina: добавям [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: добавям [natural native speed]
: Next:
Tina: настърган [natural native speed]
Matt: grated
Tina: настърган [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: настърган [natural native speed]
: Next:
Tina: кашкавал [natural native speed]
Matt: kashkaval cheese.
Tina: кашкавал [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: кашкавал [natural native speed]
: Next:
Tina: сос [natural native speed]
Matt: sauce
Tina: сос [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: сос [natural native speed]
: Next:
Tina: слагам [natural native speed]
Matt: to put
Tina: слагам [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: слагам [natural native speed]
: Next:
Tina: клиент [natural native speed]
Matt: client
Tina: клиент [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: клиент [natural native speed]
: And Last:
Tina: разбран [natural native speed]
Matt: understood
Tina: разбран [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Tina: разбран [natural native speed]
KEY VOCAB AND PHRASES
Matt: Let’s take a closer look at the usage of some of the words and phrases from this lesson.
Tina: We’ll start with “И така”.
Matt: This is a Bulgarian conjunction meaning “so” and “now then”. When it’s used as an adverb, it means “thus”, “anyways”, or “accordingly”.
Tina: In the dialogue, it’s used at the beginning of a sentence as a conjunction meaning “so”.
Matt: Could you repeat it, Tina?
Tina: Of course, “И така”.
Matt: Ok. What's next?
Tina: Next is, “По желание”
Matt: This phrase means something like “by client’s request”. Can you break down this phrase, Tina?
Tina: The first word, “по”, is a preposition meaning “by” or “on”. And the second word, “желание”, is a noun meaning “wish”, “desire”, or “will”.
Matt: Great, so altogether, it means…
Tina: “По желание”
Matt: And finally, the third word for this lesson is…
Tina: “Най-накрая”
Matt: This adverb means “finally” or “at the end”. It’s used when we describe the order of some activities like first, second, third, and “finally”
Tina: And it’s in the superlative form since it has the prefix “най-“.
Matt: Okay, now onto the grammar.

Lesson focus

Matt: In this lesson, you’ll learn how to form definite articles in Bulgarian.
Tina: In the dialogue, Kiril and his boss are discussing how to make pizza and what order to put ingredients on it.
Matt: But Kiril mistakenly uses the definite article of a noun and then his boss corrects him.
Tina: So first, let’s look at how to correctly use the definite article in Bulgarian.
Matt: First of all, we should recognize that in Bulgarian, the definite article is a suffix.
Tina: It’s added to the end of a word and changes according to the word’s function in the sentence.
Matt: And for some genders of nouns, it’s quite easy to make mistakes and use the indefinite article when the definite one is necessary.
Tina: But in this dialogue, Kiril uses the wrong gender form for the word “sauce”, which is соста in Bulgarian, and so it sounds quite unnatural.
Matt: Let’s take a look at the rules for nouns, their genders, and their definite and indefinite article forms.
Tina: For the singular forms, masculine nouns end in “-ът” or “-ят” when they are the subject in the sentence, and end in “-a” or “-я” when they are the object. For example, “клиент”/client turns to “клиентът” or “клиента”.
Matt: Alright, so we have to be careful with these. How about the feminine nouns?
Tina: In either case, feminine nouns end in “–та.” The neuter too, in either case, will end in “-то.”
Matt: I see, what about the plural forms?
Tina: The plural forms are actually even easier. Both masculine and feminine nouns always end in “-те”, regardless of the function of the word in the sentence.
Matt: I see. That sounds easier than the others.
Tina: Neuter words, also regardless of the function of the word in the sentence, end in “-та” in all cases.
Matt: Then what was wrong in our dialogue?
Tina: When Kiril said “соста”, he turned the originally masculine word “сос” into a feminine-like word, in its definite article form as the subject of the sentence.
Matt: So what’s the correct form?
Tina: The word “сос” is masculine, so the definite article form for when it’s used as a subject is “сосът”.
Matt: Could you repeat that for our listeners?
Tina: The original word is “сос”, and it becomes “сосът.”
Matt: And another example?
Tina: Дъждът донесе дъга.
Matt: Which means “The rain brought a rainbow.”
Matt: And this uses the definite article form?
Tina: That’s right. Дъждът is from the word Дъжд. Дъжд is the word for “rain”, and it’s in the masculine.
Tina: There really are endless examples of this usage.
Matt: And because we cannot say them all here…
Tina: You can check some of them in the lesson notes!

Outro

Matt: Well, that’s all for this lesson everyone!
Tina: See you next time, “Чао-чао!”
Matt: Thanks for listening, bye!

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