Practice Making Plans in Luxemburgs
Making plans is one of the most useful real-world Luxemburgs skills: it requires future tenses, time expressions, suggestions, and the gentle back-and-forth of agreeing on a place. This scenario rehearses the entire planning conversation — proposing a day, suggesting an activity, picking a time and place, and confirming via text. You'll practise the Luxemburgs verbs for 'to suggest', 'to agree', 'to prefer', and the polite phrasing that lets you decline a suggestion without offence. By the end you'll organise an outing in Luxemburgs as easily as you would in English.
Wat je leert
- Suggest activities and times in Luxemburgs
- Agree, counter-suggest, or politely decline
- Confirm a final plan with date, time, and location
- Send a quick text to update the plan
- Apologise gracefully if you need to cancel
Veelgestelde vragen
How do I suggest going somewhere in Luxemburgs?
Use the conditional or 'shall we' construction — 'How about going to…?' — which is softer than the imperative.
How do I politely decline a Luxemburgs invitation?
There's a face-saving formula — 'Thanks, but I can't on Friday — could we do another day?' — that doesn't slam the door. The scenario rehearses it.
What's the Luxemburgs for 'let's meet at 8'?
A specific construction with the time prefix — included in the vocabulary list.
How do I confirm plans last-minute in Luxemburgs?
Short texts in Luxemburgs use a contracted style. The scenario shows the casual register: 'Still on for tonight?' style.