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Practice Handling Car Trouble in Africâner

Car trouble abroad is rare but high-pressure — you need to describe a mechanical problem to a stranger in their Africâner, often by the side of the road. This scenario covers calling roadside assistance, describing the symptoms ('it makes a clunking noise when I brake'), arranging a tow, and dealing with the garage. You'll practise the Africâner verbs for 'to break down', 'to overheat', 'to leak', and the part-names that let you describe what's wrong even when you don't know the technical term.

Inicia sessão para praticarConta gratuita — sem cartão de crédito

O que vais aprender

  • Call roadside assistance and give your location
  • Describe a mechanical problem in non-expert Africâner
  • Arrange a tow and a garage appointment
  • Get a price estimate and decide whether to proceed
  • Pay and get a receipt for insurance

Perguntas frequentes

What's the Africâner for 'my car broke down'?

A specific verb construction — included in the vocabulary list — that's the standard opener for any mechanic conversation.

How do I describe a noise my car is making in Africâner?

Use comparative descriptions — 'it sounds like…' or 'a noise that goes…'. The scenario teaches the Africâner versions.

How do I ask for a price estimate before repairs?

There's a polite formula — the Africâner equivalent of 'Could I have a quote first?' — that protects you from surprise bills.

What if the garage finds more problems during the inspection?

The scenario rehearses 'Please call me before doing any extra work' — the standard customer-protection phrase in Africâner too.

Inicia sessão para praticarConta gratuita — sem cartão de crédito