Vietnamese

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Vietnamese

0-10 speakertranslate

  0    1   2   3  4   5   6   7   8    9   10
không một hai ba bốn năm sáu bảy tám chín mười
money->tiền bạc

Key Money & Shopping Phrases

 Bao nhiêu? / Nhiêu tiền? – How much? (most common)
 Cái này bao nhiêu tiền? – How much is this?
 Đắt quá! / Mắc quá! – Too expensive!
 Có thể bớt không? – Can you reduce the price?
 Không, cám ơn – No, thank you
 Tôi chỉ xem thôi – I am just looking 

Numbers for Prices

 Nghìn / Ngàn – Thousand (e.g., 50k = năm mươi nghìn)
 Trăm – Hundred (e.g., 100k = một trăm nghìn) 

Tips

 Money confusion: 10,000 VND and 100,000 VND notes look similar. Check carefully.
 Bargaining: Start with "Đắt quá!" and smile.
 Cash: Carry smaller bills; large 500k notes are hard to change.
 Rounding: Many sellers drop the "000" and say 50 for 50,000 VND. 


learning

For a two-week sprint before visiting Vietnam, the most effective methods focus on survival phrases and tonal recognition rather than deep grammar. Because Vietnamese is a tonal language, local speakers may not understand you if your pitch is incorrect, making audio-based learning critical.

1. Prioritize High-Yield Apps Pimsleur: Best for beginners to gain conversational confidence quickly through audio-only lessons that emphasize pronunciation. VietnamesePod101: Offers short audio and video lessons specifically for travelers, covering real-world scenarios like ordering food. Mondly: Useful for daily vocabulary streaks and basic phrases in a gamified format. Duolingo: Good for building a baseline of basic nouns and greetings, though some users find it less effective for actual conversation.

2. Focus on Essential Travel Vocabulary Instead of trying to learn everything, master these 15–20 high-frequency words and phrases: Greetings: Xin chào (Hello), Cảm ơn (Thank you), Xin lỗi (Excuse me/Sorry). Numbers (0–10): Vital for bargaining at markets and understanding prices. Requests: Bao nhiêu tiền? (How much?), Cho tôi một... (Give me a...), Tính tiền (The bill, please). Addressing People: Use "Em ơi" to get a server's attention in a restaurant.

3. Master the Six Tones (Audio-First) Vietnamese uses six tones that completely change a word's meaning (e.g., "ma" can mean ghost, mother, or horse depending on the pitch). Use YouTube: Watch native speakers on channels like Tiếng Việt Ơi to see mouth movements and hear the "rising" or "falling" pitch. Google Translate: Use the "listen" feature to hear correct pronunciations and even play them back to locals if you aren't understood.

4. Intensive Online Tutoring If you have a flexible budget, booking 3–5 hours of 1-on-1 sessions on italki or Wyzant can provide immediate feedback on your pronunciation, which is the hardest part of the language for English speakers.

5. Cultural & Practical Tips Regional Accents: Decide if you are visiting the North (Hanoi) or South (Ho Chi Minh City), as pronunciations and some words differ significantly.

Translation Tools: Download the Vietnamese offline pack on Google Translate for times when your two-week training isn't enough.

Would you like a specific list of essential phrases tailored to your destination, such as Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City?

review of learning apps