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Inviting Someone Out — English Shadowing Practice

Practice the natural English for inviting someone out. In this lesson you shadow real lines like “Do you want to grab coffee sometime?”, “Are you free this weekend?”, and “You should come with us.”. It gives you casual, friendly ways to invite someone without pressure. You listen and speak along, copying the relaxed, friendly rhythm so the phrases feel natural when you actually say them.

13 sentences
Do you want to grab coffee sometime?

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What this lesson trains

Make these lines automatic: “Do you want to grab coffee sometime?”, “Are you free this weekend?”, “You should come with us.”, “Would you like to go for a walk?”.

Pattern in focus: Invitation forms: “Do you want to…?,” “Would you like to…?,” “You should….”

Handy expressions to own: do you want to, are you free, would you like to, you should come.

Copy the casual intonation on “Would you like to go for a walk?” — friendliness in English lives in the melody, not just the words.

Learning goals

  • Sound natural and relaxed when inviting someone out.
  • Use the key phrases for inviting someone out with a friendly tone.
  • React and keep the conversation flowing instead of going quiet.
  • Copy casual intonation rather than sounding stiff or formal.

About this practice

The lesson is built from a real exchange of short, natural lines you'd actually use when inviting someone out.

At A2 level it's a quick social-English win you can repeat until it feels automatic.

Practice tips

  1. 1Shadow out loud with a warm, easy tone, not a flat one.
  2. 2Swap in your own details so the lines feel personal and true.
  3. 3Practice reacting (“do you want to”) so the conversation feels alive.

Frequently asked questions

What will I be able to do after this lesson?

You'll be able to invite someone out casually naturally, using friendly, practiced phrases instead of freezing up.

What level is this lesson?

A2. The phrases are short and casual — real social English rather than textbook sentences.

How do I invite someone casually?

You practice low-pressure invites like “Do you want to grab coffee sometime?” and “A few of us are meeting after work.”

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