Formal Introductions — American English Shadowing Practice
Practice natural American English for formal introductions. In this classic dialogue you shadow real lines like “I'd like you to meet Dr. Edward Smith.”, “It's nice to meet you.”, and “Pleasure to meet you, too.”. It shows how to introduce two people formally and respond. You speak along with both roles, copying American rhythm, reductions, and everyday word choice so the exchange feels natural.

More lessons from this course
a1Formal Greetings — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about formal greetings — “Good morning, Professor Austin.”, “How are you doing?”. Speak along to sound natural.
a2Informal Greetings and Farewells — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about informal greetings and farewells — “Hi, Helen. How's it going?”, “Where are you off to?”. Speak along to sound natural.
a2Informal Introductions — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about informal introductions — “Let me introduce you to her now.”, “This is my friend, Jim.”. Speak along to sound natural.
a1What Time Is It — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about telling and asking the time — “What time is it?”, “It's a quarter after seven.”. Speak along to sound natural.
a2A Telephone Call — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about making a phone call — “Hi, Alice. It's John.”. Speak along to sound natural.
a1Asking Someone to Repeat — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about asking someone to repeat — “What did you say?”, “Can you repeat that, please?”. Speak along to sound natural.
a2Coincidences — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about running into someone unexpectedly — “Long time no see.”, “What a coincidence.”. Speak along to sound natural.
a1Talking About the Weather — American English Shadowing Practice
Shadow a natural American English dialogue about talking about the weather — “I thought it was supposed to rain today.”. Speak along to sound natural.
What this dialogue trains
Make these lines automatic: “I'd like you to meet Dr. Edward Smith.”, “It's nice to meet you.”, “Pleasure to meet you, too.”, “That's my field, too.”.
Language note: Introducing with “I'd like you to meet…” and responding “Pleasure to meet you, too.”
Say this vocabulary clearly: I'd like you to meet, nice to meet you, field, economist.
Copy the American intonation on “That's my field, too.” — natural delivery is the whole point of shadowing.
Learning goals
- Handle formal introductions in natural American English.
- Reproduce American rhythm, stress, and everyday phrasing.
- Shadow both roles so you can start and respond.
- Say key vocabulary clearly enough to be understood the first time.
About this practice
This is a classic everyday-conversation dialogue about formal introductions, widely used by American English learners.
At A1 level it is a short, complete scene you can shadow repeatedly.
Practice tips
- 1Shadow closely enough to copy American reductions and linking.
- 2Drill the vocabulary (I'd like you to meet, nice to meet you, field) slowly, then at natural speed.
- 3Shadow both speakers so you can lead the conversation, not just reply.
Frequently asked questions
Is this American or British English?
American English — the dialogue models American pronunciation, rhythm, and everyday vocabulary.
What level is this dialogue?
A1. It's a short, natural everyday exchange rather than a textbook drill.
How do I introduce two people?
You practice “Mr. Wilson, I'd like you to meet Dr. Edward Smith,” and the natural replies that follow.
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