You completed three French courses. You know 1,000 vocabulary words. You can conjugate verbs in five tenses.
Then you arrive in Paris. A waiter asks you a simple question. Your mind goes blank. The words you studied disappear.
You know French in theory. But your mouth cannot produce it under pressure in real time.
Here is the gap: courses teach you to translate. Real life requires you to respond instantly without translation.
The fix is scenario practice. You rehearse exact situations you will face. Your brain links phrases to contexts. When that context appears in real life, the phrases surface automatically.
This guide gives you 15 complete ChatGPT conversation scenarios that cover 90% of situations travelers and learners face. Each scenario includes the exact prompts, common responses, and practice progressions.
Why Scenario Practice Works When Random Conversation Fails
Most people practice French conversation wrong.
They open ChatGPT and say “let’s talk about anything.”
ChatGPT asks about their hobbies. They struggle for 3 minutes. They look up words. They translate in their head. The conversation dies.
Random conversation feels overwhelming because your brain has no context. It does not know which vocabulary to access or which phrases to prepare.
Scenario practice fixes this:
Your brain links language to specific situations. When you practice “restaurant ordering” 10 times, your brain creates a pattern: restaurant context equals these phrases.
Next time you walk into a real French restaurant, those phrases surface automatically because your brain recognizes the context.
The neuroscience:
Your brain has better recall when information is stored with contextual cues. Scenario practice builds these cues. Random conversation does not.
The practical difference:
Random conversation: “Um… comment dit-on… uh… I want… je veux… wait…”
Scenario practice: Walk into restaurant → Brain activates restaurant phrase bank → “Je voudrais une table pour deux, s’il vous plaît” flows naturally
Context is the trigger. Scenario practice builds context links. Random conversation builds nothing.
The 15 Essential French Conversation Scenarios
These fifteen scenarios cover everything you need for functional French in travel and daily life.
Master these fifteen and you can navigate France, Quebec, or any French-speaking environment without panic.
Scenario 1: Ordering at a French Café
The situation:
You walk into a café. You want coffee and maybe a pastry. You need to order, possibly modify your order, and pay.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice ordering at a French café. You are the server. I am the customer. Greet me in French and ask what I want. I will respond in French. Keep the conversation at beginner level. Speak clearly. After we complete the full interaction from greeting to payment, tell me what I did well and one thing to improve. Start now.”
What happens:
Server (ChatGPT): “Bonjour! Que désirez-vous?”
You: “Bonjour. Je voudrais un café, s’il vous plaît.”
Server: “Un café crème ou un café noir?”
You: “Un café crème.”
Server: “Autre chose?”
You: “Oui, un croissant aussi.”
Server: “D’accord. Ça fait quatre euros cinquante.”
You: “Voici cinq euros.”
Server: “Merci. Voici votre monnaie.”
You: “Merci, au revoir.”
Server: “Au revoir, bonne journée!”
Essential phrases for this scenario:
- Bonjour (Hello)
- Je voudrais… (I would like…)
- Un café / Un thé / Un chocolat chaud
- Un croissant / Une tartine / Un pain au chocolat
- Combien ça coûte? (How much does it cost?)
- L’addition, s’il vous plaît (The bill, please)
- Merci, au revoir (Thank you, goodbye)
Common complications to practice:
Server asks if you want sugar: “Avec du sucre?” You need to ask where the bathroom is: “Où sont les toilettes?” You want to modify your order: “Sans sucre, s’il vous plaît”
Practice progression:
Day 1: Basic order (coffee only) Day 2: Order with one modification (coffee + pastry) Day 3: Handle follow-up questions (with/without sugar) Day 4: Ask for the bill and pay Day 5: Full scenario at normal conversational speed
Scenario 2: Checking into a Hotel
The situation:
You arrive at your hotel. You have a reservation. You need to check in, get your key, ask about WiFi, and maybe ask about breakfast.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice checking into a French hotel. You are the receptionist. I am the guest. I have a reservation. Start by greeting me. I will respond in French. After the full check-in process including asking about WiFi and breakfast, give me feedback. Begin.”
Key conversation flow:
Receptionist: “Bonjour! Bienvenue. Vous avez une réservation?”
You: “Oui, j’ai une réservation. Mon nom est [your name].”
Receptionist: “Parfait. C’est pour combien de nuits?”
You: “Trois nuits.”
Receptionist: “Très bien. Voici votre clé. Chambre numéro 205.”
You: “Merci. Il y a le WiFi?”
Receptionist: “Oui, le mot de passe est sur la table dans votre chambre.”
You: “Et le petit déjeuner, c’est à quelle heure?”
Receptionist: “De sept heures à dix heures, au rez-de-chaussée.”
You: “Merci beaucoup.”
Essential phrases:
- J’ai une réservation (I have a reservation)
- Mon nom est… (My name is…)
- Pour combien de nuits? (For how many nights?)
- Il y a le WiFi? (Is there WiFi?)
- Le petit déjeuner est à quelle heure? (What time is breakfast?)
- Où est l’ascenseur? (Where is the elevator?)
- Je peux laisser mes bagages? (Can I leave my luggage?)
Complications to add:
Receptionist says your reservation is not found You need to ask about parking You want to request a different room You need to ask about checkout time
Practice schedule:
Day 1-2: Basic check-in dialogue Day 3: Add WiFi and breakfast questions Day 4: Handle problem (reservation issue) Day 5: Full scenario with multiple questions
Scenario 3: Restaurant Full Experience
The situation:
You walk into a restaurant, get seated, order drinks, order food with modifications, ask for the bill, and pay.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s simulate a complete French restaurant experience. You are the server. I am the customer. Guide me through: getting a table, ordering drinks, ordering food including asking about the menu, making one modification to my order, asking for the bill, and paying. Speak at normal pace but clearly. Give feedback only at the end. Start with me entering the restaurant.”
Full conversation structure:
Entering: “Bonjour, une table pour deux, s’il vous plaît.” “Fumeur ou non-fumeur?” (Smoking or non-smoking?) “Non-fumeur.”
Ordering drinks: “Que voulez-vous boire?” “Deux verres de vin rouge, s’il vous plaît.”
Looking at menu: “Qu’est-ce que vous recommandez?” “Je recommande le coq au vin.”
Ordering food: “Je voudrais le poulet, s’il vous plaît.” “Et comme garniture?” (And for the side?) “Les légumes, s’il vous plaît.”
Modification: “Sans ail, s’il vous plaît.” (Without garlic, please)
Getting the bill: “L’addition, s’il vous plaît.” “Ça fait quarante-cinq euros.”
Paying: “Je peux payer par carte?” “Oui, bien sûr.”
Essential vocabulary:
- La carte / Le menu (The menu)
- Qu’est-ce que vous recommandez? (What do you recommend?)
- Je voudrais… (I would like…)
- Sans… (Without…)
- Avec… (With…)
- L’addition (The bill)
- Service compris? (Is service included?)
Advanced complications:
Dish is not available: “Désolé, nous n’avons plus de poulet.” Server asks how you want meat cooked: “Comment voulez-vous votre steak?” You want to complain politely: “Excusez-moi, mais le plat est froid.”
Scenario 4: Asking for Directions
The situation:
You are lost. You need to ask a local person where something is. You need to understand basic directions.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice asking for directions in French. You are a local person on the street in Paris. I will stop you and ask for directions to [the metro / the Eiffel Tower / a pharmacy]. Give me directions using basic words: à gauche, à droite, tout droit. I am a beginner so keep vocabulary simple. After the conversation, tell me if I understood the directions correctly. Begin.”
Basic structure:
You: “Excusez-moi, où est la station de métro?”
Local: “Allez tout droit, puis tournez à gauche. C’est à cinq minutes.”
You: “Tout droit, puis à gauche?”
Local: “Oui, c’est ça.”
You: “Merci beaucoup!”
Local: “De rien, bonne journée!”
Direction vocabulary you must know:
- À gauche (To the left)
- À droite (To the right)
- Tout droit (Straight ahead)
- Tournez (Turn)
- Continuez (Continue)
- Près de (Near)
- Loin de (Far from)
- À côté de (Next to)
- En face de (Across from)
Practice variations:
Day 1: Ask where something is, get simple one-step direction Day 2: Ask where something is, get two-step directions Day 3: Ask if it is far, ask how long it takes to walk Day 4: Ask for directions and confirm you understood correctly Day 5: Handle when the person does not know: “Désolé, je ne sais pas.”
Scenario 5: Shopping for Clothes
The situation:
You want to buy a shirt or sweater. You need to ask about sizes, try it on, ask the price, and decide to buy or not.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice shopping for clothes in France. You are the shop assistant. I am the customer. I want to buy a sweater. Start by asking if you can help me. I will respond in French. Include asking about sizes, trying it on, and the price. After the full interaction, give me feedback. Begin.”
Conversation flow:
Assistant: “Bonjour! Je peux vous aider?”
You: “Oui, je cherche un pull.” (I’m looking for a sweater)
Assistant: “Quelle taille?”
You: “Taille moyenne.” (Medium)
Assistant: “Quelle couleur préférez-vous?”
You: “Bleu ou noir.”
Assistant: “Voici un pull bleu en taille M.”
You: “Je peux l’essayer?” (Can I try it on?)
Assistant: “Bien sûr, la cabine est là-bas.”
[After trying]
You: “Ça me va bien. C’est combien?” (It fits me. How much is it?)
Assistant: “Cinquante euros.”
You: “Je le prends.” (I’ll take it)
Essential phrases:
- Je cherche… (I’m looking for…)
- Quelle taille? (What size?)
- Petit / Moyen / Grand (Small / Medium / Large)
- Je peux l’essayer? (Can I try it on?)
- C’est trop grand/petit (It’s too big/small)
- Ça me va (It fits me)
- C’est combien? (How much is it?)
- Je le prends (I’ll take it)
- C’est trop cher (It’s too expensive)
Complications:
Item is not available in your size You want a different color Price is too high, you want to decline politely You want to pay by card: “Je peux payer par carte?”
Scenario 6: At the Pharmacy
The situation:
You have a headache or need basic medicine. You need to explain the problem and ask for medication.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice going to a French pharmacy. You are the pharmacist. I am the customer. I have a headache and need medicine. Start by asking how you can help. I will explain my problem in simple French. Recommend medicine and tell me the price. Give feedback after. Begin.”
Key phrases:
- J’ai mal à la tête (I have a headache)
- J’ai mal au ventre (I have a stomachache)
- J’ai mal à la gorge (I have a sore throat)
- J’ai de la fièvre (I have a fever)
- Vous avez quelque chose pour…? (Do you have something for…?)
- Combien je dois prendre? (How much should I take?)
- Une fois par jour (Once per day)
- Avec de l’eau (With water)
- Avant/après les repas (Before/after meals)
This scenario is critical for travelers because health issues happen unexpectedly.
Scenario 7: Taking a Taxi
The situation:
You need a taxi to go somewhere. You tell the driver the destination, confirm the price if needed, and pay.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice taking a taxi in France. You are the taxi driver. I am the passenger. I need to go to [Charles de Gaulle airport / the Eiffel Tower / my hotel address]. Start by asking where I want to go. After we arrive and I pay, give me feedback. Begin.”
Essential dialogue:
Driver: “Bonjour, où allez-vous?”
You: “À l’aéroport Charles de Gaulle, s’il vous plaît.”
Driver: “D’accord. Ça va prendre environ quarante minutes.”
You: “Ça coûte combien?”
Driver: “À peu près cinquante euros.”
[After arriving]
Driver: “Voilà, on est arrivé. Quarante-huit euros, s’il vous plaît.”
You: “Voici cinquante euros. Gardez la monnaie.” (Keep the change)
Driver: “Merci, bonne journée!”
Key phrases:
- À [destination], s’il vous plaît
- Combien de temps? (How long?)
- Ça coûte combien? (How much does it cost?)
- Arrêtez-vous ici (Stop here)
- Gardez la monnaie (Keep the change)
- Je peux avoir un reçu? (Can I have a receipt?)
Scenario 8: Airport Navigation
The situation:
You are at a French airport. You need to find your gate, ask about boarding, possibly check luggage.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice airport conversations in French. You are an airport staff member. I am a passenger. I need to find my gate for a flight to [destination]. Include asking about boarding time and where to go. Keep it simple for a beginner. Give feedback after. Begin.”
Important vocabulary:
- Où est la porte d’embarquement? (Where is the gate?)
- L’embarquement commence à quelle heure? (What time does boarding start?)
- Où est le contrôle de sécurité? (Where is security?)
- Je dois enregistrer mes bagages (I need to check my luggage)
- Le vol pour [destination] (The flight to [destination])
This scenario reduces airport stress significantly when traveling to French-speaking countries.
Scenario 9: Making Plans with Someone
The situation:
You meet someone and want to make plans. Suggest meeting for coffee, agree on time and place.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice making social plans in French. You are someone I just met. I will suggest meeting for coffee tomorrow. We will discuss time and place. Use simple, casual French. After we finish planning, give me feedback on my French. Begin by asking how I am.”
Conversation structure:
Person: “Salut! Ça va?”
You: “Ça va bien, et toi?”
Person: “Très bien, merci!”
You: “Tu veux prendre un café demain?” (Do you want to get coffee tomorrow?)
Person: “Oui, bonne idée! À quelle heure?”
You: “À dix heures?”
Person: “Parfait. Où?”
You: “Au café près de la gare?” (At the café near the station?)
Person: “D’accord, à demain!”
Essential phrases:
- Tu veux…? (Do you want to…?)
- Prendre un café (Get coffee)
- À quelle heure? (What time?)
- Où? (Where?)
- Ça me va (That works for me)
- À demain (See you tomorrow)
- À plus tard (See you later)
This scenario moves you from tourist French to social French.
Scenario 10: Returning Something to a Store
The situation:
You bought something that does not work or does not fit. You need to return it or exchange it.
The exact prompt:
“Let’s practice returning an item to a French store. You are the store employee. I am the customer. I bought a shirt yesterday but it’s too small. I want to exchange it for a larger size or get a refund. Start by asking how you can help. Keep it professional but friendly. Give feedback after. Begin.”
Key phrases for returns:
- J’ai acheté ça hier (I bought this yesterday)
- C’est trop petit/grand (It’s too small/big)
- Ça ne marche pas (It doesn’t work)
- Je voudrais l’échanger (I would like to exchange it)
- Je voudrais un remboursement (I would like a refund)
- Vous avez le reçu? (Do you have the receipt?)
- Voici le reçu (Here is the receipt)
Scenarios 11-15: Quick Practice Formats
Scenario 11: At the Train Station
Buying a ticket, asking about platform and departure time.
Scenario 12: Emergency – Lost Phone
Reporting lost phone, asking where police station is, explaining what happened.
Scenario 13: At the Post Office
Sending a package, buying stamps, asking about delivery time.
Scenario 14: Booking a Doctor Appointment
Calling to make appointment, explaining symptoms, confirming date and time.
Scenario 15: Complaining About Hotel Problem
Room air conditioning not working, asking for different room or repair.
Each follows the same structure: clear prompt, essential phrases, practice progression.
The Weekly Practice Schedule
Here is how to work through all 15 scenarios in 6 weeks.
Week 1: Essential Survival
Mon: Café ordering (Scenario 1) Tue: Café ordering (repeat with variations) Wed: Hotel check-in (Scenario 2) Thu: Hotel check-in (repeat with complications) Fri: Asking directions (Scenario 4) Sat: Review all three scenarios Sun: Self-record and evaluate
Once your café and basic conversation scenarios feel solid, layer in pronunciation work with the French pronunciation guide for English speakers. It covers the sounds that will make your scenarios sound natural rather than textbook.
Week 2: Food and Navigation
Mon: Restaurant experience (Scenario 3) Tue: Restaurant (repeat with modifications) Wed: Restaurant (handle complications) Thu: Directions (repeat, new locations) Fri: Combine café + directions Sat: Full restaurant scenario at normal speed Sun: Review week
Week 3: Shopping and Services
Mon: Shopping for clothes (Scenario 5) Tue: Shopping (repeat with returns – Scenario 10) Wed: Pharmacy (Scenario 6) Thu: Pharmacy (repeat with different ailments) Fri: Combine shopping + pharmacy Sat: All Week 3 scenarios in sequence Sun: Record and compare to Week 1
Week 4: Transportation
Mon: Taxi (Scenario 7) Tue: Airport (Scenario 8) Wed: Train station (Scenario 11) Thu: Review all transport scenarios Fri: Transport challenge – taxi to airport, check-in, find gate Sat: Add complications to transport scenarios Sun: Review progress
Week 5: Social and Services
Mon: Making plans (Scenario 9) Tue: Making plans (repeat, different activities) Wed: Post office (Scenario 13) Thu: Doctor appointment (Scenario 14) Fri: Combine social scenarios Sat: Real conversation practice using social phrases Sun: Week review
Week 6: Advanced and Integration
Mon: Hotel complaint (Scenario 15) Tue: Emergency situation (Scenario 12) Wed: Chain scenarios (hotel problem leads to asking directions) Thu: Full day simulation (morning café, afternoon shopping, evening restaurant) Fri: Unexpected scenario challenge (AI picks random situation) Sat: Speed practice – all scenarios at native pace Sun: Final evaluation and recording
After 6 weeks, you have practiced all major situations multiple times.
How to Progress Each Scenario
Do not practice each scenario just once. Progress through difficulty levels.
Level 1: Basic Script (Day 1)
Memorize and repeat the basic dialogue. AI gives you every phrase.
Level 2: Guided Conversation (Day 2-3)
AI asks questions. You respond from memory. AI helps when you get stuck.
Level 3: Minimal Support (Day 4)
AI only corrects at the end. You handle the full conversation yourself.
Level 4: Complications (Day 5)
AI adds unexpected questions. You must adapt and respond.
Level 5: Normal Speed (Day 6+)
AI speaks at native conversational pace. You must keep up.
Most scenarios need 5-7 practice sessions across different days before they feel automatic.
Common Mistakes That Kill Scenario Practice
Mistake 1: Practicing Each Scenario Only Once
One practice session does not build automaticity. You need 5-10 repetitions.
Mistake 2: Skipping the Recording Step
Record yourself on Day 1 and Day 30 doing the same scenario. The improvement is obvious and motivating.
Mistake 3: Not Adding Complications
Real life is messy. Practice what happens when your reservation is not found or the item you want is sold out.
Mistake 4: Translating in Your Head
If you pause 5 seconds before responding, you are translating. Push yourself to respond in 2 seconds maximum.
Mistake 5: Using the Same Exact Phrases Every Time
Learn variations. “Je voudrais” and “J’aimerais” and “Pourrais-je avoir” all mean “I would like” but in different formality levels.
The Bottom Line on ChatGPT French Conversation
Random conversation practice wastes time. Your brain has no context to access the right phrases.
Scenario practice links phrases to situations. When you encounter that situation in real life, the phrases surface automatically.
These 15 scenarios cover 90% of situations tourists and learners face. Master these and you function confidently in France or any French-speaking environment.
Six weeks of daily 15-minute scenario practice transforms you from knowing French to speaking French.
If you are still deciding between French and Spanish as your first language, the French vs Spanish comparison guide breaks down the decision clearly.
Start today. Pick Scenario 1 (café ordering). Use the exact prompt provided. Practice 15 minutes right now.
Tomorrow practice the same scenario with variations. Day 3 add complications. By Day 5, café ordering is automatic.
Then move to Scenario 2. Follow the same progression.
By Week 6, all 15 scenarios are automatic. You speak functional French.
The scenarios work. The prompts work. You just have to practice.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many times should I practice each scenario before moving to the next?
Practice each scenario 5-7 times across multiple days. Day 1 feels hard and awkward. Day 5 feels natural. If Day 5 still feels hard, practice 2-3 more days. Move forward only when the scenario feels automatic and you do not need to search for words. Quality repetition beats quantity of scenarios.
Can I practice multiple scenarios in one day or should I focus on just one?
Focus on one new scenario per day. Once you have practiced a scenario before, you can review 2-3 old scenarios in a single 30-minute session. But learning a new scenario requires full focus for 15-20 minutes. Mixing too many new scenarios in one day prevents any from sticking properly.
What if ChatGPT responds with words I do not know in the scenario?
Stop and ask “What does [word] mean?” ChatGPT will explain in simple terms. Then continue the scenario. The first time through a scenario, you will encounter new words. By repetition 5, you know all the vocabulary in that scenario. This is normal and expected.
How is scenario practice different from using Duolingo or Babbel?
Apps teach through multiple choice, matching, and typing exercises. Scenario practice teaches through actual speaking in realistic situations. Apps build recognition. Scenarios build production ability and contextual memory. Use apps for vocabulary building. Use scenarios for conversation ability. They complement each other but serve different purposes.
For a full breakdown of every major AI language tool available today, see the best AI language learning tools for 2026.
Should I memorize exact phrases or try to improvise in scenarios?
Memorize core phrases first, then improvise variations. Café scenario: memorize “Je voudrais un café” first. Then learn to say it other ways: “J’aimerais un café” or “Un café, s’il vous plaît.” Start with exact phrases, add variations once comfortable. Improvisation comes after memorization, not instead of it.
Can children use these scenarios or are they designed for adults?
Children over age 10 can use these scenarios effectively. Younger children need shorter, simpler versions. The café and shopping scenarios work well for teenagers. The hotel and taxi scenarios are more relevant for adults. Adapt the complexity based on age and interest level.
What if I am learning French for work, not travel – do these scenarios still help?
These scenarios build conversational foundation. For business French, add workplace-specific scenarios after mastering these 15: business meetings, phone calls, presentations, negotiations. The structure is identical – you just change the context. Master casual French first, then add professional French on top.
How long until I can handle these scenarios in real life after practicing with AI?
Basic competence: 3-4 weeks of daily practice per scenario. Comfortable fluency: 6-8 weeks. Real-life conversations are messier than AI practice, but AI preparation dramatically reduces anxiety. After 6 weeks of scenario practice, most learners handle real-life versions with 70-80% success rate.
Do I need ChatGPT Plus or does the free version work for scenario practice?
You need ChatGPT Plus for voice mode. Scenarios work through text with free ChatGPT but you miss pronunciation practice. Voice mode is essential for building conversational fluency. Twenty dollars per month for Plus is worth the investment for serious language learning.
What should I do if I feel embarrassed practicing these scenarios out loud?
Practice in complete privacy where no one hears you. Bedroom, bathroom, car. Use headphones so it feels like a phone call. Embarrassment fades after 3-4 sessions because you realize AI does not judge. Speaking out loud is mandatory for conversation ability – there is no shortcut around this.
Can I create my own custom scenarios or should I only use the ones listed?
Create custom scenarios for your specific needs. Format: clear situation description, exact prompt for ChatGPT, essential phrases list, complications to add. Example: if you are attending a French wedding, create a “wedding guest small talk” scenario. Follow the same structure as the 15 scenarios provided.
How do I know if my French in scenarios is grammatically correct?
ChatGPT corrects errors if you ask it to. Add to your prompt: “Correct any mistakes I make immediately.” However, in early practice, prioritize communication over perfect grammar. If you communicate successfully even with errors, that is progress. Add grammar refinement in weeks 3-4 after basic communication works.
What if I travel to a French-speaking country before completing all 15 scenarios?
Focus on scenarios most relevant to your trip. Going to Paris for 4 days? Master café, restaurant, hotel, directions, and taxi. That is 5 scenarios. Practice these intensely 2 weeks before travel. Five scenarios practiced well beats fifteen practiced poorly.
Should I practice scenarios in order or can I skip around?
Practice café, hotel, and directions first (scenarios 1, 2, 4) as these are most essential. Then add restaurant (scenario 3). After these four are solid, practice others in any order based on your needs. The order in this guide is recommended but not mandatory.
How do I practice scenarios if I am working full-time and only have 15 minutes daily?
Use the 15 minutes for one scenario per day. Week 1: one scenario five times. Week 2: different scenario five times. Progress is slower but still effective. Six scenarios in 6 weeks (one per week) is better than no practice. Quality consistency beats rushed quantity.
Will practicing with AI prepare me for understanding different French accents?
AI uses standard French pronunciation similar to Parisian French. For regional accents (Quebec, Belgian, African), add exposure through YouTube or podcasts after mastering standard French. Basic scenario practice with AI builds foundation that works across accents. Regional variation is advanced refinement, not beginner necessity.
What should I do after mastering all 15 scenarios?
Increase complexity: add business French scenarios, practice in past and future tenses, practice disagreeing or debating, practice explaining complex topics. Or shift to human conversation partners while using AI to prepare for specific upcoming conversations. AI becomes your rehearsal tool for real life.
Can I use these scenarios to prepare for French exams like DELF?
Yes. DELF oral sections test conversational ability in realistic situations. These scenarios prepare you well for A1 and A2 level oral exams. For B1 and higher, add opinion-based scenarios and abstract topic discussions. The scenario structure works for all levels with adjusted complexity.


