100 Daily English Sentences for Everyday Conversations

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Whether you’re warming up small talk or asking for help on the go, these 100 sentences cover what you say most in real life. They’re short, natural, and easy to adapt. Use them as daily speaking drills: read out loud, record yourself, and swap a few words to make each line your own.
Pro tip: for polite tone, add softeners like “please,” “could you,” and “would you mind”; for clarity, confirm details at the end (“…right?”).
Greetings & Introductions
First impressions matter. Use these friendly openers to start conversations, introduce yourself, and set an inviting tone.
- Hi! How’s it going?
- → Pretty good, thanks. You?
- Good morning! How are you?
- → I’m good, thanks for asking.
- Nice to meet you.
- → Nice to meet you too.
- My name is [your name].
- → Nice to meet you, [name].
- Where are you from?
- → I’m from [place].
- What do you do?
- → I’m a [job].
- How have you been?
- → Pretty good, thanks.
- It’s great to see you again.
- → Great to see you too!
Small Talk & Weather
Casual conversations build rapport. These light topics help you connect without going too personal.
- How’s your day going?
- → Not bad, thanks.
- What are you up to today?
- → Just running some errands.
- Is it a busy day?
- → Kind of, yeah.
- Lovely weather today.
- → It really is.
- It’s pretty cold today.
- → Tell me about it.
- Did you watch the game last night?
- → Yeah, it was great!
- How was your weekend?
- → It was nice, thanks.
- Do you have any plans for the weekend?
- → Not yet—maybe just rest.
Polite Requests & Offers
Politeness smooths everyday interactions. Use these lines to ask for help or offer assistance naturally.
- Could you please help me with this?
- → Sure, what do you need?
- Would you mind opening the window?
- → Not at all.
- Can I ask you a quick question?
- → Go ahead.
- Could I get a glass of water, please?
- → Of course—one moment.
- Would it be okay if I sit here?
- → Yes, go ahead.
- Do you need a hand?
- → Yes, please. Thanks!
- Let me know if you need anything.
- → Will do, thanks.
- Can I get you anything?
- → I’m good, thanks.
- That would be great, thank you.
- → You’re welcome.
- I would really appreciate your help.
- → Happy to help.
Clarifying & Checking
Clarity prevents misunderstandings. These lines help you confirm details, spellings, and timing politely.
- Sorry, I didn’t catch that.
- → No problem—I’ll repeat it.
- Could you say that again, please?
- → Of course.
- Could you speak a little slower?
- → Absolutely.
- What do you mean by that?
- → I mean…
- How do you spell that?
- → It’s [letters].
- Just to confirm, we meet at 3, right?
- → Yes, 3 p.m.
- → Actually, 3:30.
- Did you mean next Monday?
- → Yes, next Monday.
- → No, I meant this Monday.
- Am I following you correctly?
- → Exactly.
Scheduling & Plans
Good planning saves time. Use these sentences to find a time, confirm logistics, and reschedule gracefully.
- Are you free tomorrow afternoon?
- → I am after 3.
- What time works best for you?
- → 10 a.m. works.
- Let’s meet at 3 p.m.
- → Works for me.
- → Could we do 3:30?
- Does Friday work for you?
- → Yes, Friday is good.
- → I’d prefer Thursday.
- Can we reschedule?
- → Sure—what time?
- I’ll get back to you by tomorrow.
- → Thanks—appreciate it.
- I’ll put it on my calendar.
- → Great, thanks.
- Let’s touch base later this week.
- → Sounds good.
- Can we do a quick call?
- → Sure—when?
- Can I take a rain check?
- → Of course.
Shopping & Money
Shopping English shows up everywhere. These lines cover prices, sizes, payments, and returns.
- How much is this?
- → It’s $25.
- → That one is on sale for $15.
- I’m just looking, thanks.
- → No problem—let me know if you need help.
- Do you have this in a medium?
- → Yes—right this way.
- → Sorry, we’re out of medium.
- Is there a discount on this?
- → It’s 10% off today.
- Can I pay by card?
- → Yes, we take all major cards.
- Could I get a receipt, please?
- → Sure—paper or email?
- Where is the fitting room?
- → It’s at the back.
- Can I return or exchange this?
- → Yes, within 30 days.
Dining & Service
From cafes to restaurants, clear requests lead to smoother service. Use these lines to order, ask, and pay.
- A table for two, please.
- → Right this way.
- → There’s a 10‑minute wait.
- Could we see the menu?
- → Of course—here you go.
- What do you recommend?
- → The salmon is very popular.
- I’ll have the chicken salad, please.
- → Great choice.
- Could we have the check, please?
- → Sure—I’ll bring it right over.
- Can we split the bill?
- → Absolutely.
Travel & Directions
On the go, concise questions get you where you need to be. These lines help with routes, timing, and tickets.
- How do I get to the train station?
- → Take the 10 bus two stops.
- Is it within walking distance?
- → Yes—about 15 minutes.
- → It’s a bit far; better take the bus.
- Which bus should I take?
- → Take the 23 toward downtown.
- How long does it take to get there?
- → Around 20 minutes.
- Is this the right platform?
- → Yes, you’re in the right place.
- → No—try platform 3.
- Is it one-way or round-trip?
- → One-way.
- → Round‑trip is cheaper.
- Could you show me on the map?
- → Sure—right here.
- I think I’m lost.
- → No worries—where are you now?
Phone & Online
Remote communication needs clarity. Use these lines to fix audio issues and coordinate links or screens.
- May I speak to Sarah, please?
- → Speaking.
- → She’s not available—can I take a message?
- You’re breaking up.
- → I’ll move to a better spot.
- I’ll call you back in a minute.
- → Okay—talk soon.
- Can you hear me okay?
- → Loud and clear.
- I’ll send you the link.
- → Thanks—I’ll check it now.
- I’ll share my screen now.
- → I can see it.
Daily English Sentences at Work
Professional communication requires a different tone, polite, clear, and action-oriented. The following sentences are commonly used in offices or remote work settings and are especially useful for older kids and teens preparing for real-world communication.
- Do you have a minute?
- → Sure—what’s up?
- Could you give me a quick update on the project?
- → We’re on track.
- Let’s kick off the meeting.
- → Sounds good.
- Could you walk us through this?
- → Absolutely—step one is…
- What’s the status on this task?
- → It’s done.
- What’s the deadline?
- → End of day Friday.
- I’ll take care of it.
- → Thank you.
- I’ll follow up after the meeting.
- → Great—thanks.
- Let’s take this offline.
- → Agreed.
- What are the action items?
- → I’ll draft the doc; you’ll review.
Opinions & Agree/Disagree
Sharing opinions respectfully keeps conversations productive. These lines help you agree, disagree, and ask for reasons without sounding harsh.
- I think this is a good idea.
- → I agree.
- In my view, we should wait.
- → That’s fair.
- From my perspective, it’s risky.
- → What risk do you see?
- That makes sense.
- → Glad it helps.
- I agree with you.
- → Appreciate that.
- I see your point, but I disagree.
- → That’s okay—tell me more.
- I’m not sure I follow.
- → Let me clarify.
- Could you explain your reasoning?
- → Sure—here’s how I see it.
- Let’s agree to disagree.
- → Works for me.
- I’m open to other ideas.
- → I have a suggestion.
Emergencies & Problems
In urgent or tricky situations, simple, direct language works best. These lines help you ask for help and explain common issues quickly.
- I need help.
- → What happened?
- It’s an emergency.
- → Call 911 now.
- Please call emergency services.
- → I’m calling now.
- I’ve lost my wallet.
- → Where did you last see it?
- I don’t feel well.
- → Do you need a doctor?
- There’s a mistake on the bill.
- → Sorry about that—I’ll fix it.
- My phone isn’t working.
- → Try restarting it.
- Can you call a taxi for me?
- → Sure—I’ll order one now.
How to Practice (7 minutes a day)
In about seven minutes a day: shadow ten lines (play a native clip or your own recording and speak in sync), swap one or two words in each sentence to make it yours, record yourself weekly to check pace, pronunciation, and clarity, and try three lines in a real conversation. Consistency beats intensity—small daily reps build real fluency.
Quick Guidelines (Use Anywhere)
Keep it short and polite—one idea per sentence, please/thank you when appropriate. Choose the right tone: “could/would” is softer than “can/will.” Confirm the essentials (time, date, place, prices, numbers, time zones), avoid vague words like “this/that/it,” and ask one question at a time.
Mirror the other person’s formality. In calls or online, say what you’ll do before you do it (e.g., “I’ll share my screen now”). If you get stuck, use safe fallbacks: “Let me rephrase,” or “Give me a second to check.”
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Typical pitfalls include asking two questions at once (ask, pause, then follow up), overusing “very/so” instead of a precise word, translating idioms literally, skipping confirmations for times/dates and time zones, and relying only on “can you” in formal requests—add “please,” or switch to “could you.”
Summary & Next Steps
Pick 5–10 lines to practice daily, personalize them, and use them in real conversations. Record a weekly check‑in to track clarity, pace, and confidence. Revisit monthly: keep what you use, retire what you don’t, and add 20 personal favorites.