I plan on going abroad in the coming year & want to know enough of the local language to ask basic things. Does anyone know something like 100 or 250 words that I could memorize to get across basic ideas & questions? I don’t care about being grammatical correct just enough to cave man speak during my time there.

  • @Diddlydee@feddit.uk
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    31 month ago

    Where is ‘abroad’? Many countries will speak English pretty well, so you may not need it depending on where you are. Any vocab book for that country will give you the basics if English isn’t commonly spoken

  • @ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    I try to learn the following sentences in the language of a country I go to if I don’t know anything at all about that language:

    • Hello, as polite as possible
    • Goodbye, as polite as possible
    • A beer please
    • I’m sorry I don’t speak <language>: do you speak English?

    I find this quite enough to strike up a conversation in most of the world. When people don’t automatically switch to English - perhaps because they don’t know it well enough - then I try another “universal” language like Spanish or French (universal mostly because of past colonialism, sadly). That implies speaking those languages of course.

    If the locals won’t speak English because of a prejudice against English (mostly French-speaking regions) I don’t even bother with the “I’m sorry…” bit. I just let them figure out by themselves that conversation is going to be difficult.

    If the locals are anti-Americans - very common, and getting more and more common - I affect a British accent. I wouldn’t fool a Brit for a New York minute but I’m convincing enough for a non-native English speaker to avoid being associated with the US.

  • @Muehe@lemmy.ml
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    61 month ago

    For many European languages and some non-European ones there is the CEFR, so you could look for an “A1” or “A2” level language course in whatever you want to learn. They aim to establish exactly this basic level of communication.

  • @otp@sh.itjust.works
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    61 month ago

    The minimal amount of words to communicate is 0.

    If you want to be functional in a new country, you’d need to figure out what kinds of things you want to say and how functional you want to be.

  • @huquad@lemmy.ml
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    221 month ago

    The invention of language made a lot of people very angry and has been widely regarded as a bad move.

  • aramis87
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    71 month ago

    The thing is, do you want to talk to people, or understand the answers? Because learning a few phrases is great but if you can’t understand the answers :shrug:

    My standard basic phrases are Please; Thank you; Excuse me; I’m sorry; Where’s the bathroom?; and I’m a vegetarian. It’s not elegant, but it covers my most basic needs.

    For places I want to go, I have a list in the local language that I can point to, and I learn the basics of written language so I can navigate (maps, store signs, menus, etc). I also watch TV in whatever the language is before I leave, preferably with English subtitles (sometimes that’s a local program, othertimes it’s a US or UK show dubbed into the local language).

  • deadcatbounce
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    1 month ago

    Five.

    1. Beer
    2. Taxi
    3. Restaurant/Food
    4. Train/Airport
    5. Hello

    Extensive research conducted all over the world. I love Asia but am awful with the language(s). French/France is my favourite place.

  • Comtief
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    21 month ago

    I’m sure you can do some level of communication with zero words. If you get really desperate, pull up a translator app like deepl.