A1 Complete
A2 — You Are Here
You're no longer a complete beginner. That changes everything.
A2 is where English stops feeling like a mystery and starts feeling like a tool. You can handle real daily situations — not perfectly, but genuinely. That’s a bigger deal than it sounds.
A1
Beginner
Basic phrases, self-introduction, survival English
A2
Elementary — You're here
Daily routines, simple conversations, past & future tense
B1
Intermediate
Handle most travel, express opinions, understand main ideas
B2
Upper Intermediate
Fluent in familiar topics, nuanced communication
C1
Advanced
Effortless expression, complex texts, near-native
C2
Mastery
Full proficiency — every nuance, every register
A2
01 ———— What is A2
The official definition — and what it actually means.
Official CEFR Definition
What it actually feels like
You can hold your own. Not perfectly — but genuinely.
A1 was survival. A2 is participation. You're no longer just reacting to English — you're actually using it to get things done, share your thoughts, and connect with people.
02 ———— Identify Yourself
You're probably at A2 if…
✓ Familiar

You can talk about your week — "On Saturday I went to the market and I bought some vegetables" — with occasional pauses and small errors, but you get through it.
✓ Familiar

You can text a colleague or friend in English — short messages feel manageable now. You don't panic at every notification the way you did before.
✓ Familiar

You can navigate an airport, hotel, or tourist situation almost entirely in English — asking for help, understanding announcements, reading signs — without major stress.
✗ Not quite yet

You still can't follow a conversation between two native speakers talking at normal speed. When people stop accommodating you and just speak naturally, you lose the thread quickly.
✓ Familiar

You can read short emails and messages without a dictionary — especially if the topic is work, plans, or everyday life. Longer texts still require a lot of effort.
✗ Not quite yet

Jokes, sarcasm, and cultural references still mostly land flat. You can tell something was supposed to be funny — but why it's funny often escapes you. This is genuinely a B1+ thing.
03 ———— Real-Life Abilities
What you can actually do right now.
01
Talk About Your Past
Use past tense to share experiences, tell short stories, and describe things that happened to you.
02
Make & Change Plans
Coordinate with people — suggesting, agreeing, rescheduling. The back-and-forth of real life scheduling.
03
Describe Your Life
Talk about your job, family, routine, likes, dislikes — the building blocks of actually knowing someone.
04
Talk About Your Past
Use past tense to share experiences, tell short stories, and describe things that happened to you.
05
Talk About Your Past
Use past tense to share experiences, tell short stories, and describe things that happened to you.
06
Talk About Your Past
Use past tense to share experiences, tell short stories, and describe things that happened to you.
04 ———— Everyday Communication
How A2 actually communicates today.
Communication in 2025 is not just talking — it’s texting, messaging, commenting, and coordinating. Here’s the full CEFR A2 English level picture.
💬 Messaging — A2 is comfortable with:
- Making and confirming plans — times, places, what to bring
- Short work messages — status updates, questions, responses
- Simple back-and-forth exchanges with a clear purpose
- Basic emoji use without relying on them to carry meaning
📱 Social media — the A2 reality:
- Reading most captions, especially for familiar topics
- Commenting meaningfully — "That looks amazing! Where was this?"
- Understanding hashtags and basic viral formats
- Following accounts where context compensates for vocab gaps
🚧 Where A2 still struggles:
- Internet slang — "no cap," "it's giving," "understood the assignment"
- Sarcasm that requires cultural context to decode
- Fast, overlapping group chats or comment threads
- Humour, wordplay, or anything that depends on nuance
05 ———— Listening & Reading
Your passive skills at A2.

Slow, clear speech in familiar contexts
Following a YouTube recipe in English without subtitles — you catch most of the key steps.
"What's your name? How long are you staying? Do you need a wake-up call?"

Short texts in familiar, concrete contexts
"Please find attached the document you requested. Let me know if you have any questions."
"Preheat the oven to 180°C. Mix the flour and butter until smooth."
06 ———— Speaking & Writing
How you express yourself at A2.

Connected sentences, real topics, small errors
"I went to the cinema last night — it was really good."
past event
"I'm planning to visit my family next month."
future plan
"I think this one is better because it's cheaper."
opinion + reason
"Sorry, could you say that again more slowly?"
repair strategy
"I usually wake up at 7 and then I have coffee."
routine
Honest truth: Your written A2 English will be read and understood by native speakers without difficulty. That's a genuinely useful skill — don't underestimate it.

Short texts, personal topics, connected ideas
"Hi! I can't come on Friday because I have a doctor's appointment."
excuse
"The apartment is small but it has a nice balcony and it's close to the metro."
description
"I really enjoyed the trip. The food was amazing and the people were very friendly."
review
"Can we meet on Tuesday instead? I'm free from 2pm."
rescheduling
Honest truth: Your written A2 English will be read and understood by native speakers without difficulty. That's a genuinely useful skill — don't underestimate it.
07 ———— Vocabulary & Grammar
What actually matters at A2.
1,500+ words
That’s your A2 vocabulary range — and the jump from A1’s ~600 is significant. These extra words are the difference between “I am tired” and “I had a really exhausting week.”
Your word bank now covers daily life in real depth: describing people, places, events, feelings, and simple opinions. You can be specific, not just general.
Daily routines
Past experiences
Numbers & time
Future plans
Health & body
Transport & travel
Work & study
Money & shopping
Weather & seasons
Feelings & opinions
Comparisons
Common phrasal verbs
Past Simple
BIGGEST UNLOCK
I went / she didn't come / did you see?
"I visited my parents last weekend. We had dinner together."
Going to / Will
FUTURE PLANS
"I'm going to visit London next month." / "It will be cold tomorrow."
Comparatives & Superlatives
EXPRESS OPINIONS
bigger / more expensive / the best / less crowded
"This hotel is more expensive but it's much nicer."
Modal Verbs
SOCIAL TOOL
"Could you help me?" / "Should I call first?" / "Would you like a coffee?"
08 ———— Digital & Social Life
A2 English in the
places you already live.

Content you consume daily
can
can
can
HARD
Current slang — “understood the assignment,” “no cap,” “it’s giving main character”
HARD

Slack, Teams, Gmail, Notion
can
can
can
HARD
HARD

Video content with and without subs
can
can
can
HARD
HARD
09 ———— Work & Social
A2 in the situations that actually count.
👋 Meeting new colleagues
A1 learners actually thrive here — video + image context fills in a lot of language gaps. You understand more than you think.
"Hi, I'm Maria. Nice to meet you. I work in marketing. And you?" — This is A1-doable, and it creates a real human connection.
❓ Asking for help at work
You can flag that you need something without necessarily being able to explain the full context. Simple, direct requests work just fine at this level.
"Excuse me, where is the printer?" / "Can you help me, please?" / "I don't understand. Can you repeat?"
📋 Following basic instructions
If instructions are given clearly and slowly — especially with demonstration — A1 learners can follow along and get the job done.
Nodding, pointing, and using "OK" and "yes" to confirm understanding. Not glamorous, but it works in a basic job environment.
📢 Understanding announcements
Workplace announcements — safety info, schedule changes, meeting reminders — are often short and repetitive, which A1 handles reasonably well.
"Fire drill today at 2pm. Please use the stairs." — Key words land even if the full sentence doesn't.
🎉 Being at a social event
Small talk formulas carry you further than you think. Most opening conversations follow predictable patterns that A1 handles well.
"Hi! I'm [name]. Nice to meet you. How do you know [host]?" — You'll get by, even if deeper conversation is harder.
🍽️ Going out to eat
Restaurants are an A1 comfort zone. The script is predictable, visual menus help, and staff are used to non-native speakers.
"A table for two, please." / "I'll have the pasta." / "Can I have the bill?" — Confidence wins here.
🗺️ Asking for directions
You can ask. Understanding the answer is the harder part — but pointing, looking at phones, and saying "sorry, can you show me?" all help.
"Excuse me, where is the metro?" is A1. What comes back might be harder — but most people will point.
🛒 Shoppin
One of the easiest A1 real-world scenarios. Predictable, repetitive, and context-rich. Signs, prices, and visual cues do most of the work.
"How much is this?" / "Do you have this in size medium?" / "I'll take it." — All completely within A1 reach.
10 ———— A Day in the Life
24 hours as an A2 learner.
☀️ Morning routine
Your phone alarm goes off. The notification says "Reminder: meeting at 10am today." You understand it. You also see an Instagram post from a brand you follow — "Good morning! Happy Monday ☕" — and you get it, you like it.
English moments: phone notifications, simple social media captions — A1 handles both comfortably.
8:00 AM
☕ Getting coffee before work
You stop at a café. "One flat white, please." The barista asks "Do you want a receipt?" You catch "receipt" — you say yes. Small win. Total success.
English moment: Basic transaction in a predictable context. Context and visual cues fill in the blanks.
9:30 AM
💼 Work meeting
Your manager says something quickly and you catch the words "project," "Thursday," and "email." You nod. Later, you check the email — short and clear — and you understand what's expected.
English moment: You miss some of the spoken meeting but the written follow-up email is manageable. A1 in action.
10:00 AM
🥗 Lunch — navigating a food truck
The menu is simple. You order "the chicken wrap, please." The person asks "Is that for here or to go?" — you've heard this before. "To go, please." Done.
English moment: Learned phrases do real work here. This is exactly why A1 vocab is worth building.
1:00 PM
📺 Evening — Netflix with subtitles
You put on an English-language show with English subtitles. You don't understand everything but you pick up words you know — "stop," "help," "I love you," "tomorrow." The visual story carries you through the rest.
English moment: Passive learning that actually works. This is one of the most effective things an A1 learner can do.
7:00 PM
11 ———— A Day in the Life
24 hours as an A2 learner.
60–100
Hours of guided study
15–30
Minutes per day is enough
8–12
Weeks on average
What moves the needle at A2

Talk to real people (even if it's terrifying)
Language exchange apps like Tandem or HelloTalk. Even 15 minutes of real conversation accelerates progress more than hours of passive study.

English content you actually enjoy
Watching with English subtitles is proven to build vocabulary fast. Pick a show you'd watch anyway — just switch the audio and subs.

Keep a simple journal in English
Narrate your day in English. "I am making coffee. It is hot. I am tired." Sounds silly, works incredibly well.

A1 graded readers
Books written exactly for your level — enough challenge to grow, not so much that it's a slog. Penguin and Oxford Bookworms both have excellent A2 series.
Your next level: B1
B1 is where English stops being effortful and starts feeling like something you actually have. Here's what crossing that line gives you.
A2

Real conversations — even about abstract topics
B1 speakers can discuss hopes, opinions, and experiences without scripting everything in advance. Spontaneity arrives at B1.

You start getting the jokes
Humour, irony, and cultural references start landing. This is one of the most satisfying moments in a language learning journey.

TV and podcasts without subtitles become possible
Not everything — but familiar genres at moderate speed. A huge milestone that opens up your English content world.

Get recognised if you need it
Cambridge A2 Key (KET) formally certifies your level. Useful for university applications, visa processes, or CV evidence.
11 ———— A Day in the Life
24 hours as an A2 learner.
What A2 English actually looks like woven through a real Tuesday — not a language exercise, but your actual life.
5 minutes · No sign-up · Covers all 6 CEFR levels
Sample questions from the quiz:
Which sentence is correct?
A
B
c
You want to reschedule a meeting. What do you say?
A
B
c
