
Introduce yourself and practice Thai conversation for beginners (A1 level) by reading aloud, role-playing, and listening to dialogues across ten topics, with transliteration, grammar, cultural insights, and exercises.
Learn how Thai speakers name countries, express origin with con, and form nationality phrases. Master Thai pronouns, polite kun, and using names as pronouns in Thai language conversation.
Learn Thai pronouns and basic sentence structure by forming questions with subject-verb-question word order, and practice with verbs like gin (eat) and chop (like) through practical dialogue prompts.
Master Thai possessives by placing the noun before khong chan to mean my, with examples like my cat and my family; learn family vocabulary and yes-no questions using bang.
Learn Thai family vocabulary, covering siblings and relatives, possessive pronouns with kong, and terms for husband, wife, boyfriend/girlfriend, and fiancé, plus basic conversation patterns.
Part 4 explains how to form possessive pronouns in Thai by placing kong before the pronoun, with examples like khong chan, and guides practice sentences using noun–kong–pronoun patterns.
Learn how to form Thai yes-no questions using the word my, with examples about family and meals, and practice dropping words for natural speech, invitations, and polite refusals.
Advance Thai conversation by forming longer sentences with varied subjects, times, and places, using core verbs for speaking, reading, and watching; practice from pictures.
Learn to form negative sentences in Thai by placing mai before a verb or adjective, with no pronoun changes, covering present, past, or future contexts.
Learn to form can, cannot, and can you in Thai using die and die my for ability, potential, or permission. The lesson uses examples like eating spicy, reading, and cooking.
Learn Thai conversation for beginner (A1) part 2, practicing how to ask someone's opinion and describe food and activities with everyday terms like sanook, aroy aroy, pit, pang, and mark.
Learners explore expressing feelings in Thai, including happy, tired, afraid, shy, and excited, and practice using when (wela) to link actions with feelings in everyday dialogue.
Explore Thai conjunctions and modal verbs, learning how to say but and connect sentences with pad thai examples, and use can and cannot with pro and tam.
Explore days and time in Thai, learn how to ask when and tell time, master weekdays and months, and practice beginner conversation in Part 1.
Master Thai date phrases by learning today, tomorrow, yesterday, next and last, and practice numbers from zero to ninety-nine with Thai pronunciation and counting patterns.
Learn how to ask about time in Thai, with donnie for now, ji for how many, and wang for availability, including morning and evening examples.
Learn to tell Thai time in both 24-hour and casual speech, using am and pm, midnight expressions, and common terms like Narlikar and by moon.
Learn how to tell time in Thai with am and pm, say hours and minutes, and build daily routine sentences about waking, meals, work, and going home.
Master Thai time expressions from morning to night, practice part-of-day vocab and asking the time, and apply scheduling phrases to complete half of level one.
Learn Thai weather and seasons, including three seasons (summer, winter as labeled, and the rainy season), plus months, comparatives and superlatives, and weather dialogue.
This lesson covers weather and seasons in Thai, introduces seasonal vocabulary, expressions like jang for 'so', and how to name months with comb or yawn endings.
Learn Thai conversation part 3 covers saying this month, last month, and next month; naming holidays, festivals, and days; using lunar calendar approximations and common Thai festival terms.
Learn how to order food and drinks in Thai, including phrases to add or omit ingredients and to request water. The lesson centers on tom yam goong and restaurant dialogue.
Practice ordering Thai food using the word call before dishes and drinks, with container classifiers, and learn common items like pad thai and tom yum goong.
Learn to request extra or no extra items in Thai using sai sai and my side. Practice ordering foods with special requests and learn Thai fruit vocabulary and related terms.
Learn essential Thai drink vocabulary, kitchen items, and polite request phrases, then practice ordering with listening exercises and conversational drills.
Learn how to shop in Thailand and ask how much an item costs using ki baht, and right classifiers. Discover bargaining phrases like lodi for discounts when buying multiple shirts.
This lesson explains thai classifiers and how to form how many questions by placing the classifier after the number, with examples like song for clothing and mao for animals.
Master Thai location expressions using verb to be located and prepositions for at, inside, outside, in front of, behind, next to, with places like market, temple, hotel, and airport.
Learn Thai location prepositions like in front of, behind, and beside. Use examples such as opposite, left or right side, and in front of the bathroom.
Thai Conversation for Beginner A1 is a practical speaking course designed for complete beginners who want to start speaking Thai from day one. Whether you're planning to travel, live, study, or work in Thailand, this course helps you build a solid foundation in everyday Thai conversation with real-life examples.
In this A1-level course, you’ll cover 10 essential topics that are commonly used in real-life situations. You’ll learn how to greet people, introduce yourself, order food and drinks, ask for directions, use numbers in daily life, shop at local markets, and more. Each lesson focuses on real conversations, not just grammar, so you can start speaking Thai with confidence and clarity.
Taught by "Kru Chom from Thai By Chom" an experienced native Thai teacher with 9 years of experiences, this course provides:
Easy-to-follow speaking practice
Useful vocabulary and sentence patterns
Cultural tips and pronunciation support
Downloadable PDFs and audio for revision
Practical exercises to boost retention and fluency
Perfect for travelers, digital nomads, expats, or anyone interested in learning spoken Thai, this course focuses on communication skills, not memorizing rules. By the end of the course, you’ll be able to hold short, meaningful conversations and feel more connected to Thai people and culture.