Useful Phrases for Everyday Life
Phrases that make everyday life easier and create goodwill:
| German | Thai (Phonetic) | Thai Script |
|---|---|---|
| My name is ... | chǔue ... kráp/kâ | ชื่อ...ครับ/ค่ะ |
| I'm from Germany | maa jàak yeer-ra-man | มาจากเยอรมัน |
| I'm from Austria | maa jàak oos-dtria | มาจากออสเตรีย |
| I'm from Switzerland | maa jàak sa-wít-ser-laen | มาจากสวิตเซอร์แลนด์ |
| Thailand is beautiful | mueang tai sǔay mâak | เมืองไทยสวยมาก |
| I love Thai food | chôop aa-hǎan tai mâak | ชอบอาหารไทยมาก |
| Can I take a photo? | tàai rûup dâi mái? | ถ่ายรูปได้ไหม |
| This is too expensive for me | paeng gern bpai | แพงเกินไป |
| I don't speak Thai | pûut paa-sǎa tai mâi dâi | พูดภาษาไทยไม่ได้ |
| A little Thai | pûut tai dâi nít-nòi | พูดไทยได้นิดหน่อย |
| Goodbye | laa gòn kráp/kâ | ลาก่อนครับ/ค่ะ |
| Good luck! | chôok dii! | โชคดี! |
| Fun! / Funny! | sa-nùk! | สนุก! |
Survival Tips for Communication
- Google Translate: The Thai translation is now surprisingly good, especially the camera function (hold the phone over Thai script, and it will be translated). The speech input/output also works reasonably well.
- Point & Smile: At the market, pointing works better than speaking. On the menu, pictures work better than letters. And everywhere, a smile works better than anything else.
- Hotel Business Card: Always take a business card from your hotel (written in Thai) — so any taxi driver can bring you back, even if he doesn't speak a word of English.
- 555 = "Ha Ha Ha": In Thai chats, "555" means laughter — because the number 5 is pronounced "hâa" in Thai. If a Thai writes "555" to you, they're laughing.
💡 Tipp
The ultimate charm booster: Say "Mueang Thai suay maak" (Thailand is beautiful) and "Chop ahan Thai maak" (I love Thai food). These two sentences guarantee you smiling faces and often an invitation to dine.