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At a Restaurant

Street food stalls and local restaurants are where Vietnamese shines. These phrases will enhance your eating experience immensely.

Cultural Context:

Pointing at menu items or what others are eating is totally acceptable. Food culture is casual and welcoming. Don't expect fast service—meals are social, not rushed.

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Cho tôi một phần

Cho toy mote fun

Literal: "Give me one portion"

"One portion please"

When to use:

Ordering food at stalls or restaurants

Cultural Tip:

Point at what you want as you say this

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Không cay

Khom kai

Literal: "Not spicy"

"Not spicy"

When to use:

If you can't handle heat—VERY useful

Cultural Tip:

Vietnamese food isn't super spicy compared to Thai, but this helps

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Tính tiền

Teen tee-en

Literal: "Calculate money"

"Check please / Bill please"

When to use:

When you want to pay

Cultural Tip:

May need to call the server over first with 'Em ơi!' (em oy - excuse me)

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Ngon lắm!

Ngon lam!

Literal: "Delicious very!"

"Very delicious!"

When to use:

Complimenting the food—makes vendors incredibly happy

Cultural Tip:

This phrase creates instant warmth and often leads to conversations

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Món này là gì?

Mon nay la zee?

Literal: "Dish this is what?"

"What is this dish?"

When to use:

Asking about unfamiliar food

Cultural Tip:

Point at the dish and ask—people love explaining their food

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Tôi ăn chay

Toy an chai

Literal: "I eat vegetarian"

"I'm vegetarian"

When to use:

Indicating dietary restrictions

Cultural Tip:

Vietnam has great vegetarian food—look for 'cơm chay' restaurants

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Không bột ngọt

Khom bot ngot

Literal: "Not powder sweet"

"No MSG"

When to use:

If you want to avoid MSG

Cultural Tip:

MSG is common in Vietnamese cooking—this requests without

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Cho tôi nước lọc

Cho toy noo-oc lock

Literal: "Give me water filtered"

"Filtered water please"

When to use:

Ordering water

Cultural Tip:

Usually they bring bottled water—tap water isn't safe to drink

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Món nào ngon?

Mon now ngon?

Literal: "Dish which delicious?"

"What's good here? / What do you recommend?"

When to use:

Asking for recommendations

Cultural Tip:

Locals love sharing their favorites—leads to best discoveries

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Cho tôi đũa

Cho toy doo-a

Literal: "Give me chopsticks"

"Chopsticks please"

When to use:

If you need chopsticks

Cultural Tip:

Most places have them, but sometimes you need to ask

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Em ơi!

Em oy!

Literal: "Younger sibling hey!"

"Excuse me! (to get server's attention)"

When to use:

Calling a waiter or server

Cultural Tip:

Standard way to get attention—not rude at all

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Cay một chút

Kai mote chute

Literal: "Spicy one little"

"A little bit spicy"

When to use:

If you want some spice but not too much

Cultural Tip:

Vietnamese usually add chili sauce themselves at the table

Practice Tips

Start Simple

Master 2-3 phrases before moving on. Use them in real situations. Confidence comes from repetition, not memorization.

Embrace Mistakes

Vietnamese people are incredibly patient and supportive. Your accent will be off—that's okay. Effort matters more than perfection.

Use It Daily

Order coffee in Vietnamese every morning. Say thank you in Vietnamese every time. Language lives in practice, not textbooks.

Ask for Help

"How do you say...?" is a powerful phrase. Locals love teaching their language and will become your best teachers over coffee.