Which Verb Best Fits Scold In Tagalog For Adults?

2026-01-31 06:18:35 93
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4 Answers

Braxton
Braxton
2026-02-02 08:29:43
Short and practical: for scolding adults I most often say 'sawayin' or 'pagsabihan.' 'Sawayin' hits the tone between nagging and outright attacking — think firm correction. You can soften or toughen it with adverbs: 'Sawayin mo siya nang mahinahon' vs 'Sawayin mo siya nang mabagsik.'

If you mean loud, emotional scolding, people say 'sinigawan' or 'sinabihan nang malakas.' For formal condemnation, choose 'batikusin' or 'tuligsa.' I like keeping 'sawayin' in my toolbox because it’s versatile and less likely to burn bridges.
Victoria
Victoria
2026-02-03 08:30:15
My approach tends to be analytical: I break the options down by register and intention. If the scolding is private and corrective, 'sawayin' or the causative 'pagsabihan' are the most idiomatic choices. 'Sawayin' suggests chiding; 'pagsabihan' emphasizes the act of telling someone off. Example contrasts: 'Sawayin mo siya nang mahinahon' (chide him/her calmly) versus 'Sigawan mo siya' (yell at him/her).

For adult relationships where respect and face need to be preserved, I recommend 'sabihan' with a modifier like 'marahan' or 'mahinahon' to avoid escalation. When the reprimand is public or formal, use 'batikusin' or 'tuligsa' to convey strong critique. I also watch for context words: adding 'nang seryoso' or 'nang mahinahon' changes the whole feel. In practice, I reach for 'sawayin' for everyday scolding and reserve 'batikusin' for serious, public condemnation — that balance usually keeps things clear and civil in conversations.
Miles
Miles
2026-02-05 13:31:31
I get asked this a lot in casual chats, and my instinct is to reach for 'saway' or 'sawayin' when the goal is to say 'scold' for adults. To my ear, 'sawayin' carries that middle ground — it can be firm without being humiliating. If you want to tell someone off in a straightforward but not vicious way, I'd say 'Sawayin mo siya dahil sa ginawa niya' (Scold him/her because of what they did).

If you need different shades: use 'sabihan' or 'pagsabihan' when you're admonishing someone directly but politely, and choose 'sigawan' or 'bully-in' (more like 'sigaw' or 'sigawan') when it's loud and angry. For formal or public condemnation, 'batikusin' or 'tuligsa' fit better — they sound harsher and more official. Personally, I prefer 'sawayin' in most adult-to-adult situations because it keeps the focus on correction rather than humiliation.
Frank
Frank
2026-02-06 02:23:14
I usually pick words based on tone. For a calm, corrective scolding of an adult I'll use 'sabihan' or 'pagsabihan' — it sounds less aggressive and more like setting boundaries: 'Pagsabihan natin siya tungkol diyan.' If I mean a sharp reproach that shows real displeasure, 'sawayin' works: 'Sawayin mo siya nang maigi.'

When things are heated and people are shouting, you’d hear 'sinigawan' or just 'sinabihan nang malakas.' And for formal criticism — like in an article or speech — 'batikusin' or 'tuligsa' is the pick. I find the subtle differences matter a lot in Tagalog: the same idea can feel caring, annoyed, or downright hostile depending on which verb you use.
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