Southern Vietnamese
Vietnamese Hotel Check-in Phrases
Handle check-in, Wi-Fi, room issues, and checkout.
Try it now
Tôi đã đặt phòng
I booked a room
Use at check-in.
Say it
Listen first, then use these tone cues.
Tên tôi là...
My name is...
Follow with your name.
Say it
Listen first, then use these tone cues.
Cho tôi chìa khóa
Please give me the key
For key card or room key.
Say it
Listen first, then use these tone cues.
Wifi là gì?
What is the Wi-Fi?
Short and useful.
Say it
Listen first, then use these tone cues.
Mật khẩu wifi là gì?
What is the Wi-Fi password?
More specific Wi-Fi question.
Say it
Listen first, then use these tone cues.
The short version
Handle check-in, Wi-Fi, room issues, and checkout.
Real-life use
Vietnamese Hotel Check-in Phrases belongs to one concrete situation. Memorize the first two lines as complete chunks, then adjust one detail when the real situation changes.
Core examples
| Vietnamese | English | Practice note |
|---|---|---|
| Tôi đã đặt phòng | I booked a room | Use at check-in. |
| Tên tôi là… | My name is… | Follow with your name. |
| Cho tôi chìa khóa | Please give me the key | For key card or room key. |
| Wifi là gì? | What is the Wi-Fi? | Short and useful. |
| Mật khẩu wifi là gì? | What is the Wi-Fi password? | More specific Wi-Fi question. |
Southern Vietnamese note
In Southern Vietnamese daily speech, short direct phrases are normal. Politeness comes from tone, relationship words, and timing, not from long English-style sentences.
How to practice today
- Pick the line you would actually need this week.
- Say it three times while imagining the place.
- Cover the Vietnamese and recall it from the English.
- Save it for spaced review.
Common mistakes
Do not translate a long English sentence word by word. Use the Vietnamese chunk that locals expect in that situation.
Next step
Open the related phrasebook and save two more lines from the same situation.
Meaning check
Quick practice
Which Vietnamese line best fits this page?
FAQ
Is vietnamese hotel check-in phrases useful for beginners?
Yes. The page focuses on short phrases and patterns that beginners can reuse immediately.
Should I wait for audio before studying this page?
No. Read and practice the text first. Native audio can be added later without changing the learning path.
Finish this lesson
Ready to mark complete?
Mark complete only after you have listened, practiced, and saved at least one useful phrase. Then continue straight to the next task.
Listen to at least 3 phrases
Use normal audio first, then slow audio.
Save at least 1 phrase
Only save phrases you would actually reuse.
Finish the quiz or practice task
Check that you can recall the idea, not only read it.
Mark this page complete
Completion is manual so you stay in control.
Practice panel
Keep it useful
Listen, save one useful phrase, then mark this lesson complete.