Essential Traditional Chinese Phrases You’ll Actually Use
Learn Traditional Chinese (繁體中文) survival phrases with pinyin, clear usage notes, and one-tap audio. Perfect for first conversations, Taiwan travel moments, and “please help, my brain forgot tones” situations.
Quick yak story: I once walked into a Taipei bubble tea shop, confidently said 我要這個 —and then froze like a statue because the follow-up question came at light speed. The phrase that saved me wasn’t fancy. It was 不好意思 + a smile. Instant social reset.
Yak Snark Box: If you only learn three phrases today, make them 請問 , 不好意思 , and 可以再說一次嗎? . They’re basically the “undo button” of conversations.
What You’ll Get
- A “Core Kit” of the most useful Traditional Chinese phrases (with pinyin + audio).
- A searchable phrase bank for greetings, directions, food, shopping, and emergencies.
- Mini real-life dialogues you can copy (and adapt in seconds).
- Common mistakes to avoid so you sound natural—not robotic.
- A 5-minute daily practice plan that’s actually doable.
- Core Kit: The “Start Here” Phrases
- Phrase Bank: Search + Copy + Audio
- Language In Action: Mini Dialogues
- Quick Wins You Can Use Today
- Common Mistakes (And Easy Fixes)
- A 5-Minute Practice Plan
- FAQ
Core Kit: The “Start Here” Phrases
If you’re starting from zero, learn these first. They unlock the most situations with the least memorizing.
Hello / Hi. Safe, universal, and never weird.
“Excuse me / May I ask…” The polite opener for questions.
Excuse me / Sorry (small). Great for squeezing past, interrupting, or softening anything.
Thank you. You will use this approximately 9,000 times.
You’re welcome. Friendly and common.
Is it okay? / Can I? A compact permission-checker.
How much? Works for markets, cafés, and “oops I forgot the price tag” moments.
Where is the restroom? The MVP of travel vocabulary.
I want / I’d like… Add the thing you want. Instant ordering power.
I don’t understand. Calm, honest, useful.
Can you say it again? Your friendly “rewind” button.
Goodbye / See you again. Simple, polite, always safe.
Use The “Polite Sandwich.” Start with 請問 , ask your question, end with 謝謝 . In Taiwan, this combo is basically social lubricant. 請問 + 問題 + 謝謝
Conversation Rescue Trick: Add 一下 to soften requests. Example: 可以等一下嗎? “Can you wait a sec?” It makes you sound calmer and more natural.
Phrase Bank: Search + Copy + Audio
Use this like a “situational menu.” Type what you need (taxi, help, sugar, station) or filter by category. Tap Audio to hear it, tap Copy to save it.
| Category | Phrase | Meaning + Usage Note | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Greetings | 早安 | Good morning. Friendly and common (especially in Taiwan). | |
| Greetings | 晚安 | Good night. Use when leaving late or before sleep. | |
| Greetings | 你叫什麼名字? | What’s your name? (Friendly, slightly more personal.) | |
| Greetings | 我叫… | My name is… (Add your name. No drama.) | |
| Greetings | 很高興認識你 | Nice to meet you. Works in casual and polite settings. | |
| Polite + Repair | 麻煩你了 | “Sorry to trouble you / Thanks for the help.” Super useful in service situations. | |
| Polite + Repair | 對不起 | Sorry (more serious than 不好意思). Use for real mistakes. | |
| Polite + Repair | 沒關係 | It’s okay / No problem. Great reply to small apologies. | |
| Polite + Repair | 可以幫我嗎? | Can you help me? Pair with 請問 for extra politeness. | |
| Polite + Repair | 這個怎麼說? | How do you say this? Point to the thing. Language learning magic. | |
| Directions + Transit | 我想去… | I want to go to… (Taxi, directions, or telling a friend.) | |
| Directions + Transit | 在這裡嗎? | Is it here? Use when you’re unsure you’ve arrived. | |
| Directions + Transit | 左轉 / 右轉 | Turn left / turn right. Combine with 在那邊 if pointing. | |
| Directions + Transit | 直走 | Go straight. Short, powerful, and you’ll hear it a lot. | |
| Directions + Transit | 我迷路了 | I’m lost. Add 不好意思 first for maximum kindness. | |
| Food + Drinks | 菜單 | Menu. Point + say: 可以看菜單嗎? “Can I see the menu?” | |
| Food + Drinks | 我要這個 | I’ll take this / I want this. Works great with pointing. | |
| Food + Drinks | 不要冰 / 少冰 | No ice / less ice. Bubble tea superpower. | |
| Food + Drinks | 半糖 / 無糖 | Half sugar / no sugar. Another bubble tea MVP. | |
| Food + Drinks | 結帳 | To check out / pay. In restaurants, you can ask: 可以結帳嗎? | |
| Shopping + Payments | 我只是看看 | I’m just looking. Perfect when someone offers help and you’re browsing. | |
| Shopping + Payments | 可以刷卡嗎? | Can I pay by card? Helpful in smaller shops. | |
| Shopping + Payments | 可以便宜一點嗎? | Can it be a little cheaper? Best for markets, said politely. | |
| Emergency + Health | 我不舒服 | I don’t feel well. Simple, direct, and understood quickly. | |
| Emergency + Health | 我需要醫生 | I need a doctor. Say it slowly and clearly. | |
| Emergency + Health | 請幫我叫救護車 | Please call an ambulance. High-stakes phrase—worth practicing once. | |
| Emergency + Health | 我需要幫助 | I need help. Broad, simple, useful when you’re stressed. |
Language In Action: Mini Dialogues
These are “copy-paste conversations.” Learn the bolded lines first. Everything else can be improvised with a smile.
Core bricks: 我要… + 少冰 + 半糖 .
Core bricks: 請問 + …在哪裡? + 謝謝 .
Core bricks: 我不懂 + 可以再說一次嗎? .
Dialogue 1: Bubble Tea (Easy Mode)
You can say hi, smile, and point at the menu.
“I’d like a bubble milk tea.” Swap the drink name and keep the sentence.
Two quick preferences. You’ll sound like you’ve done this before.
Seal the deal. Always a good ending.
Dialogue 2: Asking For Directions (Polite Sandwich)
Opener + question in one breath. Smooth and polite.
If you catch only two words, catch these.
Always. Forever. Say it.
Dialogue 3: When Your Brain Says “Nope”
Soft apology + honest reset. This is my personal lifesaver phrase.
Ask for repeat. Most people will slow down automatically.
Quick Wins You Can Use Today
You don’t need 200 phrases. You need three you’ll actually say. Here’s what tends to work fast.
Win #1: Learn A “Question Frame.” Memorize 請問,…在哪裡? and you can ask about restrooms, stations, exits, anything.
Win #2: Shadow One Phrase. Pick a short phrase (like 不好意思 ). Tap Audio, then copy the rhythm out loud 5 times. Tones get easier when you practice whole phrases, not single syllables.
Your “Pocket Script” (Copy This)
Opener. Buy yourself a second to think.
Softener. Use when interrupting or squeezing past people.
Repair. Turn confusion into clarity.
Common Mistakes (And Easy Fixes)
These mistakes are normal. I’ve made every single one—often while holding a drink I absolutely did not order.
Mistake 1: Using “Sorry” Too Strongly
對不起 can sound more serious. For small bumps, interruptions, or “excuse me,” use 不好意思 .
Mistake 2: Fighting Tones One Syllable At A Time
Try whole phrases first. Copy the melody of 請問 as one unit. Tones often “lock in” when your mouth learns the full rhythm.
Mistake 3: Freezing When You Don’t Understand
Don’t pretend. Use the repair combo: 我不懂 + 可以再說一次嗎? . Native speakers will usually slow down and help.
Mistake 4: Forgetting “Polite Glue”
If you’re unsure what to say, add 請問 or 不好意思 before your sentence. It buys time and makes everything sound kinder.
A 5-Minute Practice Plan
This is the smallest daily routine that still moves the needle. Consistency beats intensity (yes, even for yaks).
Choose five you’ll actually use this week. Copy them into your notes with the Copy buttons.
Tap Audio and repeat each phrase 3–5 times. Aim for rhythm, not perfection.
Say one phrase to a person today—shop, café, friend, anyone. Real usage makes memory stick.
If you only do one thing: master 請問 . It opens doors, starts conversations gently, and gives you a second to think. That’s not small—that’s strategy.
FAQ
Is Traditional Chinese Different From Simplified Chinese For Speaking?
The characters are different, but the spoken Mandarin you’ll use for these phrases is largely shared. You’ll mainly notice regional word choices and accents. This page uses Traditional characters and Taiwan-friendly everyday phrasing.
Do I Need Perfect Tones To Be Understood?
Not perfect—just clear. Start with whole phrases and keep your pace steady. If you’re not understood, use 不好意思 and try again slowly. Your calm delivery helps a lot.
What’s The Most Polite Way To Ask A Stranger For Help?
Use the polite sandwich: 請問 + your question + 謝謝 . If you’re making a bigger request, add 麻煩你了 .
How Many Phrases Should I Learn Before Traveling?
Ten is a sweet spot: greetings, restroom, “I want…”, price, directions, and the three repair phrases. If you can say those comfortably, you can handle most daily moments.
My Browser Doesn’t Play Audio. What Now?
No stress. Use the Copy buttons and practice by reading aloud. If audio works sometimes, try refreshing the page. Audio relies on your device/browser speech voices, and availability can vary.
Keep Going (Without Overthinking It)
Traditional Chinese gets friendly fast when you focus on phrases, not perfection. Pick ten from this page, practice five minutes a day, and use one phrase in the real world this week. The first time someone smiles and answers you back in Chinese? That’s the moment your brain starts believing you. Your yak is cheering quietly (and holding a bubble tea for emotional support).





