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Niveau: Gevorderd

Practice Catching Up With a Friend in Grieks

Catching up with a Grieks-speaking friend is the scenario where natural fluency really shows. Past tenses, opinions, gossip, plans for the future — it all comes together in one rambling conversation. This scenario rehearses the friendly informal register, the verbs you need to talk about what you've been up to, and the small reactions ('No way!', 'Really?', 'That's amazing') that make you sound less like a tourist and more like a friend. You'll practise asking about family, work, and weekend plans without sounding like you're filling out a form.

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Sample Grieks conversation

Voorbeeldgesprek
  1. Γεια! Πόσο καιρό! Πώς ήσουν;

    Hey! It's been so long! How have you been?
  2. Τέλεια! Τόσα έγιναν από τότε.

    I've been great! So much has happened since we last met.
  3. Πες μου τα πάντα! Τι νέα;

    Tell me everything! What's the big news?
  4. Βρήκα νέα δουλειά! Είμαι ενθουσιασμένος!

    I got a new job! I'm really excited about it.
  5. Συγχαρητήρια! Τι δουλειά; Σου αρέσει;

    Congratulations! That's amazing! What kind of work is it? Do you like it so far?
  6. Τη λατρεύω! Υπέροχη ομάδα, μαθαίνω πολλά.

    I love it! The team is great and I'm learning a lot.

Wat je leert

  • Use the past tenses to describe recent events
  • Express opinions and reactions naturally
  • Ask about family, work, and personal news
  • Make and respond to plans for the near future
  • Use idiomatic 'fillers' that sound native

Veelgestelde vragen

How do I sound natural in casual Grieks conversation?

Use the informal verb forms, drop unnecessary pronouns, and use reaction words like 'really?' and 'no way!'. The scenario models all of these.

What past tense should I use to talk about recent events in Grieks?

There's typically one preferred tense for 'today/this week' news. The scenario uses it consistently so you internalise it.

How do I keep a Grieks conversation going when I run out of things to say?

Open-ended questions ('And how's your family?') and reaction prompts ('Tell me more!') are the universal save. The scenario rehearses both.

What if my friend speaks too fast in Grieks?

Use the polite 'Could you say that again, slower?' — friends usually slow down once asked. The scenario teaches the friendly informal version.

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