Sproochentest
The A2 oral section covers 18 everyday speaking topics with over 200 possible questions. The most useful Sproochentest speaking topics are the everyday themes that examiners can easily turn into short personal questions: home, transport, food, health, shopping, languages, and similar daily-life subjects. The safest way to prepare is to practise direct, two- or three-sentence answers across these recurring topic clusters.
Use real Sproochentest-style topic categories and question patterns to prepare the oral section efficiently.
Exact exam context first, then preparation guidance.
Best use
Topic speaking preparation
Question style
Short everyday personal questions
Answer target
Direct answer plus detail
Next step
Open topic-specific practice pages
Topic preparation is not about memorising full essays. It is about becoming comfortable with predictable everyday prompts so you can answer without long pauses.
For each topic, practise a short opinion, one everyday habit, and one concrete example. That gives you enough material to survive most question variations without sounding scripted.
Next step
Try a free speaking mock
Use the real product flow after reading the guide.
Official facts are separated from our preparation guidance.
INLL official Sproochentest overview
Official overview of the Sproochentest, including the exam purpose, structure, and current registration context.
https://www.inll.lu/en/sproochentest-en/
MyINL registration portal
Official portal for account creation, registration, and candidate administration.
https://myinl.inll.lu/
Council of Europe CEFR framework
Reference framework for language levels such as A2 and B1.
https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages
Reviewed
LëtzPass editorial team
Reviewed with input from a native Luxembourgish speaker and Sproochentest tutor.
Last reviewed: April 3, 2026
Two or three short sentences are often enough if they are direct, relevant, and easy to understand.
The wording can change, but the recurring everyday themes are stable enough that topic-based practice is worth doing.