Practice Talking About Hobbies in Tailandês
Hobbies are the scenario where Tailandês learners often shine — you already know your interests, so the conversation is just about translating them. This scenario rehearses the verbs for the most common hobbies (sports, music, reading, cooking, gaming), how to express enthusiasm, and how to ask about someone else's interests. You'll learn the Tailandês formula for 'I've been doing X for Y years' and the small-talk extensions that turn 'I like cycling' into a 5-minute conversation about your favourite routes.
O que vais aprender
- Describe your main hobbies with the right verbs
- Talk about how long you've been doing something
- Ask about someone else's hobbies and interests
- Express enthusiasm without sounding overdone
- Find common ground and suggest doing something together
Perguntas frequentes
Which Tailandês verb do I use for 'to play' a sport vs an instrument?
Tailandês often uses different verbs for 'play sports' vs 'play instruments'. The scenario distinguishes them clearly.
How do I say 'I've been doing X for 3 years' in Tailandês?
There's a specific construction — included in the scenario — that doesn't translate word-for-word from English.
What's a polite way to say I don't like someone's hobby in Tailandês?
'It's not really my thing' is the universal soft answer. The Tailandês equivalent is in the vocabulary list.
How do I suggest doing a hobby together in Tailandês?
Use the future or conditional — 'We could go cycling together sometime' — which doesn't commit but opens the door. The scenario teaches the phrasing.