Back to Blog
Lithuanian A1/A2 Exam: Writing Section Guide
Lithuanian A1 examLithuanian A2 examLithuanian writingexam preparationNŠAlanguage proficiencyA1 levelA2 level

Lithuanian A1/A2 Exam: Writing Section Guide

The writing section is part of the 1 hour 30 minute electronic test, taken together with reading on the same computer session. There is no strict time split — you decide how long to spend on each part.

Most candidates find 40–45 minutes is enough for the writing tasks. If you finish reading quickly, you will have more time to write — and vice versa.

What You Will Be Asked to Write

The writing section typically contains two tasks:

Task 1: Fill in a form

You are given a short form with blank fields and must fill it in based on either your own information or a short text or scenario. Common forms include:

  • A library or gym registration form
  • A job application form
  • A doctor's appointment form
  • A hotel booking form

Fields typically ask for: name, surname, date of birth, address, phone number, nationality, reason for visit, and similar personal details.

This task is straightforward if you know standard personal information vocabulary. Practice spelling your own details in Lithuanian.

Task 2: Write a short text

You are asked to write a short piece of practical writing — usually 20–30 words. Common text types include:

  • A message or text — to a friend, neighbour, or colleague
  • A short letter — to a doctor, landlord, or service provider
  • An announcement — for a notice board or social media post
  • An invitation — to an event or gathering

The task description tells you the situation, who you are writing to, and what to include. Follow the instructions carefully — missing a required point costs marks.

What Examiners Look For

Your writing is assessed on four things:

  1. Task completion — Did you cover everything the task asked for? If the prompt says to write about three things, write about all three.
  2. Vocabulary — Are you using appropriate words for the situation? Basic but correct is better than ambitious but wrong.
  3. Grammar — Are sentences grammatically correct? At A2 level, this means getting cases, verb endings, and basic tenses right.
  4. Coherence — Does the text read naturally? Simple connectors like ir (and), bet (but), todėl (therefore), and nes (because) help your writing flow.

Useful Phrases by Text Type

Starting a message or letter

  • Labas! — Hi!
  • Sveiki! — Hello! (more formal)
  • Gerbiamas / Gerbiama — Dear (Mr/Ms) — formal
  • Rašau dėl... — I am writing about...
  • Norėčiau sužinoti... — I would like to find out...

Giving information

  • Mano vardas yra... — My name is...
  • Aš gyvenu... — I live in...
  • Dirbu... — I work as a...
  • Man reikia... — I need...
  • Norėčiau užsiregistruoti... — I would like to register for...

Making a request

  • Ar galėtumėte...? — Could you...?
  • Prašau atsiųsti... — Please send...
  • Norėčiau sužinoti, ar... — I would like to know if...

Closing a message or letter

  • Iki pasimatymo! — See you!
  • Iki greito! — See you soon!
  • Pagarbiai — Yours sincerely (formal)
  • Laukiu atsakymo — I look forward to your reply

Grammar Points to Know

Verb endings — Lithuanian verbs change depending on the subject. Get these right for the most common persons:

Person Ending (present tense, -ti verbs)
Aš (I) -u (einu, dirbu)
Tu (you, informal) -i (eini, dirbi)
Jis / Ji (he / she) -a (eina, dirba)

Cases — Lithuanian has cases, and A2 writing requires getting the most common ones right:

  • Nominative — the subject: Tomas dirba (Tomas works)
  • Accusative — the object: Noriu kavos (I want coffee — genitive after noriu), Matau Tomą (I see Tomas)
  • Dative — to/for someone: Rašau draugui (I am writing to a friend)

You do not need to master all seven cases — but nominative, accusative, and genitive appear most frequently in A2 writing.

Negation — add ne- to the verb: Neturiu (I don't have), Nežinau (I don't know), Negyvenu (I don't live).

Tips for the Writing Section

Read the task instructions twice. Make sure you understand the situation and everything you are asked to include before you start writing.

Write simply and correctly. A short, accurate sentence is worth more than a long, confused one. Do not try to show off vocabulary you are not sure about.

Use a structure. Even a 60-word text benefits from a greeting, a body (2–3 sentences), and a closing. This makes your writing feel complete and organised.

Check your work. Leave 3–5 minutes to re-read what you wrote. Check that verb endings match the subject, that you have used the right case after prepositions, and that you have covered all points from the task.

Do not leave the form half-empty. Even if you are unsure of a field, write something reasonable. A blank field is a definite zero; a reasonable attempt may score partial credit.

What to Practise

  • Write short messages and letters in Lithuanian every week — even just 3–4 sentences
  • Practise filling in forms (you can find sample forms on the NŠA website)
  • Learn standard phrases for opening, closing, and common situations
  • Ask a teacher or language partner to check your writing and point out recurring mistakes

The writing section is one of the most improvable parts of the exam. With regular practice, it becomes predictable — you will see the same task types and the same vocabulary again and again.


Looking for more exam preparation help? See our guides on the reading, listening, and speaking sections, or read the full exam overview.

Walk into the exam ready.

One free session every day. Unlimited with a plan.