corie smitha
How do you order in Vietnamese like "i would like a coffee" or "i would like a hamburger"
Oct 22, 2017 4:12 AM
Answers · 5
1
If you want to be polite in a restaurant, just add "làm ơn" (please) when you give the order. Vietnamese doesn't have a way to express to want something vs would like something.
October 22, 2017
It usually goes something like this depending on who you are talking to: - "Em oi, cho toi xin mot ly ca phe" (additional politeness) - "Em oi, cho mot ly ca phe" (I hear this more often as Saigoners tend to shorten their sentences) You can also take out the "em oi".
October 30, 2017
Not a native speaker at all, but I do know that all this indirect hyper-polite stuff is not part of the Vietnamese mindset. What we would consider to be very rude when ordering is not rude at all in Vietnam. To us, 'Em oi!" is terribly rude.. but not in Vietnam. When ordering anything, 99% of the time it seems that you would literally just name the item you want without any "I'll have the... " or "I'd like the..." funny business. Again, this roundabout way of talking is idiomatic to English culture.
October 22, 2017
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