In a Crowded Theater — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Practice a short, simple English dialogue about asking about a seat politely. You shadow easy lines like “Excuse me, is this seat taken?”, “Would you mind moving over one?”, and “No, not at all.”. It covers a polite request to change seats and its reply. Because the dialogue is short and clear, it's ideal for beginners — you speak along with both roles until the exchange feels natural.

More lessons from this course
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a2Informal Greetings and Farewells — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Shadow a simple English dialogue about informal greetings and farewells — “Hi, how are you?”, “Where are you going?”. Beginner-friendly speaking practice.
a1Formal Introductions — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Shadow a simple English dialogue about formal introductions — “I'd like you to meet Dr. Edward Smith.”, “How do you do, Dr. Smith?”. Beginner-friendly speaking practice.
a2Informal Introductions — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Shadow a simple English dialogue about informal introductions — “Who's the tall girl next to Barbara?”. Beginner-friendly speaking practice.
a1Telling the Time — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Shadow a simple English dialogue about asking and telling the time — “What time is it?”, “It's a quarter to five.”. Beginner-friendly speaking practice.
a2A Telephone Call — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Shadow a simple English dialogue about making a simple phone call — “May I speak to Alice Weaver, please?”, “Just a minute.”. Beginner-friendly speaking practice.
a1Talking About Feelings — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Shadow a simple English dialogue about talking about being happy or worried — “You look happy today.”. Beginner-friendly speaking practice.
a2Ordering a Meal — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing
Shadow a simple English dialogue about ordering a meal at a restaurant — “Are you ready to order now, sir?”. Beginner-friendly speaking practice.
What this dialogue trains
Make these easy lines automatic: “Excuse me, is this seat taken?”, “Would you mind moving over one?”, “No, not at all.”, “Thanks a lot.”.
Language note: Polite request “Would you mind …?” with the reply “No, not at all.”
Say this everyday vocabulary clearly: seat taken, move over, not at all, thanks a lot.
Copy the natural intonation on “Thanks a lot.” so even simple lines sound real.
Learning goals
- Handle asking about a seat politely in simple, correct English.
- Speak short everyday dialogue lines with natural rhythm.
- Shadow both roles so you can start and reply.
- Build beginner confidence through short, repeatable practice.
About this practice
This is a short, classic everyday dialogue about asking about a seat politely, ideal for beginner shadowing.
At A2 level it is a quick, complete exchange you can repeat until it's automatic.
Practice tips
- 1Shadow out loud slowly first, then speed up to natural pace.
- 2Drill the vocabulary (seat taken, move over, not at all) until it's clear.
- 3Shadow both speakers so you can lead as well as respond.
Frequently asked questions
Is this good for beginners?
Yes — the dialogue is short and uses simple, high-frequency English, which makes it ideal for early speaking practice.
How should I use a short dialogue like this?
Shadow it several times across a few days until both roles feel automatic, rather than drilling it once.
How do I answer “Would you mind…?”
With “No, not at all” to agree — you practice both the request and this common reply.
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