Practice Meeting Someone New in 프랑스어
First impressions in 프랑스어 are built from small details — the right greeting, the right register of 'you', whether to use a kiss-on-the-cheek or a handshake. This scenario rehearses introducing yourself, asking the basic getting-to-know-you questions ('Where are you from?', 'What do you do?'), and navigating the moment when conversation could continue or fizzle. You'll practise the friendly-but-polite register most 프랑스어 speakers default to with strangers, and the natural follow-up questions that turn an introduction into an actual conversation.
Sample 프랑스어 conversation
Bonjour ! Enchanté. Je m'appelle Linguarudo. Comment vous appelez-vous ?
Hello! Nice to meet you. My name is Linguarudo. What's your name?Enchanté de vous connaître. Je m'appelle Alex.
Nice to meet you. My name is Alex.Enchanté de vous connaître, Alex ! D'où venez-vous ?
Great to meet you, Alex! Where are you from?Je suis d'ici.
I'm from here.Oh, super ! Alors vous connaissez bien le coin. Qu'est-ce que vous faites dans la vie ?
Oh, wonderful! So you know this area well. What do you do for work?Je suis étudiant.
I'm a student.
배울 내용
- Greet someone with the right level of formality
- Introduce yourself with name, origin, and purpose
- Ask the basic getting-to-know-you questions
- Show interest with follow-up questions and reactions
- Politely exchange contact details or end the chat
자주 묻는 질문
Should I use formal or informal 프랑스어 when meeting someone new?
It depends on age and context — but as a learner, defaulting to formal is safer. The other person will invite you to switch. The scenario rehearses both registers.
What's a good icebreaker in 프랑스어?
Asking about the local area or their work usually works. The scenario gives you the natural follow-up question patterns.
How do I exchange names without it feeling awkward in 프랑스어?
The 프랑스어 script is gentler than the English 'What's your name?'. We use a softer construction in the scenario.
What if I forget the person's name in 프랑스어?
There's a polite phrase — the 프랑스어 equivalent of 'Sorry, what was your name again?' — that's the universal recovery line.