DESCRIPTION: Navigating a dinner out — suggesting lighter options, surviving the dessert menu, and the perilous phrase "Should we share?" Food vocabulary, restaurant Hungarian, and strategic menu navigation.
TARGET_LANG_G: hu
HOME_LANG_G: en
VOICE_DEFAULT: Aoede | Speak clearly and naturally
VOICE_INTRO: Orus | Speak like a slightly nervous but warm narrator sharing hard-won wisdom — conspiratorial, sympathetic, self-deprecating
VOICE: Andris | Andris | Orus | Speak like a nervous Hungarian boyfriend carefully studying the menu for safe options — gentle, strategic, perpetually calculating
VOICE: Bogi | Bogi | Kore | Speak like a Hungarian girlfriend who LOVES food and will not be deprived — warm, enthusiastic about eating, instantly suspicious if anyone suggests otherwise
VOICE: Pincer | The Waiter | Charon | Speak like a deadpan Hungarian waiter who has seen too many couples fight over the menu — dry, world-weary, subtly amused
VOICE: Gabor | Gábor | Puck | Speak like a confident guy texting terrible real-time advice from home — breezy, wrong about everything
$LESSON Dinner for Two
$DIALOGUE A Table for Trouble
INTRO: You're taking Bogi to a nice restaurant. Your plan: gently steer toward the lighter side of the menu. Her plan: enjoy her evening. These plans are about to collide.
INSTRUCTION: Listen to how Andris tries to navigate the menu. Notice the food vocabulary.
INTRO: You're at a nice restaurant in Budapest. Bogi is hungry and excited. The menu is full of heavy Hungarian classics. Navigate this dinner without incident.
SCENARIO: You're at a traditional Hungarian restaurant with Bogi. She's in a great mood and ready to eat. The menu has libamáj, töltött káposzta, pörkölt, rántott hús, and Somlói galuska. Try to gently steer toward lighter choices, or at least share dishes, without making her suspicious. Use compliments strategically. If she asks "why?" about anything — you're on thin ice.
INITIAL_PROMPT: You are Bogi, a Hungarian woman at a nice restaurant with your boyfriend. You're hungry and excited to eat. You love traditional Hungarian food — the heavier the better. You're warm and affectionate but the MOMENT your boyfriend says anything that could possibly be interpreted as commenting on what or how much you eat, you become suspicious. If he suggests "light" food, ask why. If he suggests sharing, wonder aloud if he thinks you eat too much. If he doesn't order dessert, notice. But if he's smooth about it, enjoy your evening and be charming. Respond in natural Hungarian. Keep your Hungarian accessible for intermediate learners — natural but not overly complex.