Formal vs Informal Language
Knowing When to Use Which ToneLearn when to say “Dear Sir” and when to say “Hey!” — context matters!
📖 Let’s Learn Formal vs Informal Language!
You don’t talk to your Principal the same way you talk to your best friend, right? The way you change your language based on the situation is called register. Formal register is for official and professional situations. Informal register is for friends and family.
Knowing when to use formal vs informal language is a crucial life skill. Using the wrong register can make you sound rude (too informal) or stiff (too formal). Grade 5 students should be able to switch smoothly between both!
💡 The Rule
Formal: Used for officials, exams, letters, speeches. Polite, proper grammar, no slang.
Informal: Used with friends, family, casual chat. Relaxed, contractions, slang OK.
Key: Match your language to your AUDIENCE and SITUATION.
🎯 Key Concept
🎭 Formal: “I would like to request your kind permission…”
🎭 Informal: “Hey, can I go?”
🎭 Same meaning, different register!
📋 Formal vs Informal
Official, polite, full sentences, no slang
Casual, relaxed, contractions, slang OK
Letters, exams, speeches, to elders/officials
Friends, family, texting, casual conversation
Formal: “request” / Informal: “ask”
Switch between registers based on context
🎭 Examples & Practice
Learn with organized examples and sentences!
Greetings & Openings
Requests & Questions
Word Swaps: Formal ↔ Informal
When to Use Which?
📢 Read Both Versions
Say the formal and informal versions — feel the difference!
✏️ Formal or Informal?
Choose the right answer!
1. “Hey, what’s up?” is ___ language.
2. “I would like to request…” is ___ language.
3. A letter to the Principal should be ___.
4. Chatting with your best friend is ___.
5. The formal word for “buy” is ___.
🎯 Formal or Informal Word?
Click each word to categorize!
Click any to check!
📝 Convert Formal ↔ Informal
See the same message in both registers!
Formal: “I wish to inform you that I will be absent tomorrow.” → Informal: “Hey, just letting you know I won’t be there tomorrow.”
Formal: “I sincerely apologise for the inconvenience caused.” → Informal: “Sorry about the trouble!”
Formal: “Could you kindly provide me with the required documents?” → Informal: “Can you give me those papers?”
Formal: “I would be grateful if you could assist me.” → Informal: “Can you help me out?”
Formal: “The event will commence at 10 AM sharp.” → Informal: “It starts at 10.”
Formal: “Thanking you in anticipation.” → Informal: “Thanks in advance!”
Memory Trick
Remember F.A.S.T.:
Formal = Far (distant relationship — officials, strangers)
Informal = Inner circle (close relationship — friends, family)
The closer the person, the more informal you can be!
🎮 Formal vs Informal Language Quiz
Test what you’ve learned!
Formal language is used for…
Informal language is used for…
The formal word for “ask” is…
The formal word for “start” is…
“Hey, what’s up?” is…
Exam answers should be written in ___ language.
The ability to switch registers is called…
A letter to the Principal uses…
🎉 Quiz Complete!
0/8Fun Facts
The concept of language register was developed by linguist Michael Halliday in the 1960s. He showed that EVERY person switches registers multiple times a day!
In India, we naturally code-switch between Hindi and English (called “Hinglish”) AND between formal and informal registers. Indian kids are actually natural multilingual code-switchers!
🧠 Tips for Parents
Role-Play Scenarios
“Ask for permission from your Principal” (formal) vs “Ask your friend to play” (informal). Same request, different register!
Rewrite Exercise
Give a formal sentence, child converts to informal (and vice versa). Builds register flexibility.
Real-Life Observation
Point out register in daily life: “Notice how Papa talks to his boss vs how he talks to us?” Register is everywhere!