Practice Checking Into a Thai-Speaking Hotel
Hotel check-in is the first conversation that decides how comfortable your trip feels. In Thai, you'll need to confirm your reservation, hand over a passport, ask about Wi-Fi and breakfast times, and request small things like an extra pillow or a quiet room. This guided scenario rehearses the polite, slightly formal register most hotel staff use, and gives you the vocabulary for the awkward moments — a missing reservation, a different room category, an early-morning departure. Practise these Thai hotel phrases and you'll arrive ready instead of fumbling through a translation app at the front desk.
Hva du lærer
- Confirm a reservation and present identification politely
- Ask about Wi-Fi, breakfast hours, and check-out times
- Request a room change, an extra bed, or a quieter floor
- Understand instructions about safes, key cards, and amenities
- Arrange a wake-up call, a taxi, or luggage storage
Vanlige spørsmål
Should I use formal or informal Thai when checking into a hotel?
Formal — receptionists use 'usted' / 'Sie' / 'vous' equivalents in Thai, and you should match them. This scenario uses the formal register throughout.
What if my Thai hotel reservation isn't found?
Practice the phrases for 'I have a confirmation number…' and 'Could you check under a different spelling?'. The scenario walks through that exact branch.
How do I ask for a room with a view in Thai?
There's a polite construction in Thai that translates as 'Would it be possible to have a room with…?'. We rehearse this in the conversation tree.
Is hotel Thai different in different countries?
Slightly — pricing terms, breakfast vocabulary, and tipping expectations vary by region, but the core check-in script is consistent across Thai-speaking countries.