Practice Afrikaans at a Police Station
A police station visit in Afrikaans — to file a report, to ask for help, or to recover a lost item — is one of the highest-stakes scenarios for a learner. The register is formal, the vocabulary is technical, and getting your story across precisely matters. This scenario rehearses filing a report calmly: greeting the officer, explaining the incident in chronological order, providing your details, and understanding what happens next. You'll practise the past tenses for narrating events, the legal vocabulary in Afrikaans, and the polite formulas for asking 'What should I do now?'.
Što ćeš naučiti
- File a calm, structured report with the officer
- Narrate an incident in chronological order
- Provide ID and contact information clearly
- Understand the next steps and a case number
- Ask for an interpreter if you need one
Često postavljana pitanja
Can I ask for an interpreter at a Afrikaans police station?
Yes — it's your right in most countries. The scenario teaches the phrase 'Could I have an interpreter, please?'.
How formal should my Afrikaans be at a police station?
Very formal — full sentences, formal 'you', complete answers. The scenario uses formal register throughout.
What past tense should I use to describe what happened in Afrikaans?
Most Afrikaans languages use a specific past tense for narrative events. The scenario uses it consistently so you absorb the pattern.
What's the Afrikaans for 'I'd like to file a report'?
A specific construction included in the vocabulary list — it's the standard opener you'll want to memorise.