Ask for Directions in Portugisiska — Real-World Practice
Asking strangers for directions in Portugisiska is one of the highest-stakes beginner conversations: you have ten seconds, the other person is in a hurry, and you need to understand the answer the first time. This scenario teaches you to open with a polite hook ('Excuse me, sorry to bother you…'), ask a clear question, and — most importantly — confirm what you've been told before walking away. You'll practise the directional vocabulary in Portugisiska: left, right, straight, around the corner, behind the church, past the second traffic light. By the end, you'll feel comfortable stopping a passer-by in any Portugisiska-speaking city.
Sample Portugisiska conversation
Olá! Parece que está um pouco perdido. Posso ajudar a encontrar alguma coisa?
Hello! You look a bit lost. Can I help you find something?Sim, por favor! Estou procurando a estação de trem.
Yes, please! I'm looking for the train station.A estação de trem? Não é longe. Siga em frente e vire à esquerda no semáforo. Vai vê-la à sua direita.
The train station? It's not far. Go straight ahead and turn left at the traffic light. You'll see it on your right.A que distância fica daqui?
How far is it from here?Uns cinco minutos a pé. Fica bem pertinho!
About five minutes on foot. It's very close!Ah, é perto! Muito obrigado.
Oh, that's close! Thank you so much.
Vad du lär dig
- Open a request politely without sounding intrusive
- Ask for a specific street, landmark, or type of place
- Understand left/right/straight and ordinal directions
- Repeat back instructions to confirm understanding
- Ask the person to slow down or repeat without embarrassment
Vanliga frågor
What's the politest way to stop someone for directions in Portugisiska?
Lead with the Portugisiska equivalent of 'Excuse me, sorry to bother you'. It signals respect and almost always gets a friendlier response than jumping straight to your question.
How do I ask people to slow down in Portugisiska?
Practise 'Could you repeat that more slowly, please?' — it's the single most useful sentence for navigation conversations. We rehearse it in this scenario.
What if I don't understand the answer in Portugisiska?
The scenario teaches you to repeat back what you heard ('So, left at the corner and then straight?') — locals will correct you immediately if you got it wrong.
Are there regional differences in directional vocabulary in Portugisiska?
Some — block sizes, intersection naming, and pedestrian conventions vary, but the core directional words (left/right/straight/across) are universal in Portugisiska.