Pack the words that matter. These are the 30 English phrases that actually come up on a trip, from your first Hello to calling for help, grouped by situation and written with a simple pronunciation guide.
The most useful English travel phrases cover greetings, politeness, directions, food, and emergencies. Learn a handful first: Hello (hello), Please (please), Thank you (thank you), and Where is the toilet? (where is the toilet?). This free tool groups 30 essential English phrases by situation, each with a plain-English pronunciation, so you practice only what your trip needs.
All 30 phrases, grouped by situation.
A phrasebook gets you through the airport. Reading real English books, with a tap for translation and native audio on every sentence, is how the words start to stick. Lingo7 turns a book a level above you into something you can actually read. Free to start.
Learn by situation, not alphabetically. Your memory files Hello next to the moment you would use it, so run through the greetings before you fly, the restaurant block on the way to dinner, and the emergency block once so it is there if you ever need it.
The pronunciation guide is written the way an English speaker would read it aloud, with the stressed syllable in capitals. It is a crutch, not the real sound. Say each phrase out loud a few times, and if you can, listen to a native speaker to fix the vowels that plain English spelling cannot capture.
Phrases get you to the country. What gets you fluent is meeting the same words again and again in context, which is exactly what reading does. Once Please and Thank you feel automatic, the next step is a real English sentence, then a page, then a book. That is the whole idea behind reading in Lingo7.
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Start with greetings and politeness, then the phrases that solve a real problem: asking directions, ordering, paying, and getting help. On this page that is Hello (hello), Please (please), Thank you (thank you), Where is the toilet? (where is the toilet?), and Help! (help). Learn those few and you can be polite and safe almost anywhere.
In English, hello is Hello (pronounced heh-LOH) and thank you is Thank you (thank yoo). Add Please for please and Goodbye for goodbye, and you have the words that carry most short exchanges with a shopkeeper, waiter, or stranger.
Ask Where is the toilet? (pronounced wair iz thuh TOY-let), which means "where is the toilet?" in English. If you only catch part of the reply, I don't understand (I don't understand) and a smile usually gets it repeated or pointed out. It is one of the few phrases worth memorizing word for word before you go.
No, but a dozen English phrases go a long way. Locals warm up fast when you open with Hello and Thank you instead of English. You do not need grammar or fluency for a trip, just the survival set above. For anything past that, the fastest route to real English is reading, which is exactly what Lingo7 is built for.