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Practice Vietnamese at the Pharmacy

Pharmacies in Vietnamese-speaking countries are often your first stop for minor health issues — pharmacists give advice that would require a doctor's appointment elsewhere. This scenario teaches you to describe symptoms, ask about over-the-counter options, mention allergies, and understand dosage instructions. You'll practise the body-parts vocabulary, the verbs for 'to hurt' and 'to feel', and the polite formulas for asking 'What would you recommend?'. By the end, you'll feel confident walking into a Vietnamese-speaking pharmacy alone.

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What you'll learn

  • Describe symptoms with body-part vocabulary
  • Ask for an over-the-counter recommendation
  • Mention allergies and existing medications
  • Understand dosage and frequency instructions
  • Ask whether something requires a prescription

Frequently asked questions

How do I describe pain in Vietnamese?

There's a specific verb construction — 'My X hurts' — that differs from English. The scenario walks through the body-parts vocabulary too.

Can Vietnamese-speaking pharmacists prescribe medications?

Many can recommend over-the-counter options but not prescribe. The scenario teaches you to ask 'Do I need a prescription?'.

How do I ask about allergies in Vietnamese?

Use 'I'm allergic to…' followed by the substance. The vocabulary list includes common allergens (penicillin, peanuts, lactose, etc.).

What's the Vietnamese for 'twice a day' (medication frequency)?

There are specific dosage phrases that differ from everyday Vietnamese. The scenario rehearses 'twice a day with food', 'before meals', and 'as needed'.

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