Use all 50 Relationships & Family discussion questions at A2 level in YapYapGo's Topic Discussion mode. Questions are displayed one at a time with vocabulary on demand, automatic student pairing, and session history tracking.
20 topic categoriesVocabulary on demandNo repeatsAge filtering
Relationships are at the heart of daily life, and even A2 speakers have plenty to say about their friends, family, colleagues, and neighbours. These 50 questions ask adult learners to describe their best friend, talk about what makes a good neighbour, discuss how they stay in touch with family, and share what they value in the people around them.
Vocabulary focuses on the practical language of human connection: words like 'friend', 'colleague', 'neighbour', 'trust', 'kind', and 'helpful' combine with structures like 'my best friend is...', 'I like people who...', 'we usually...', and 'a good friend is someone who...' that give A2 speakers tools to discuss relationships meaningfully.
Why Relationships Work at A2
Everyone has relationships, and everyone can describe the people who matter to them. For A2 adults, this topic works because it draws on universal experience and uses vocabulary that is both common and personally meaningful. A student describing their best friend is doing real communicative work with language they will use outside the classroom.
Setting Up Relationship Conversations
Start with friendship questions before moving to family and workplace relationships. The progression from casual to more complex relationships mirrors the vocabulary demands. YapYapGo handles question sequencing and timing so you can focus on supporting individual conversations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Questions focus on friendship, family, and community relationships using inclusive language. They do not assume particular family structures or cultural norms.
Describing people, explaining preferences, and talking about daily interactions build the social English adults need for workplace communication, neighbourhood life, and building friendships in English.
Yes. Relationship questions work as conversation starters in private lessons. The personal nature of the topic generates natural back-and-forth dialogue between teacher and student.