A1 noun #3,107 mais comum 2 min de leitura

invite

An invite is a short, informal way to ask someone to come to a party or event.

Explanation at your level:

An invite is a message to ask a friend: 'Please come!' You use it for parties or fun things. It is short and easy to say.

When you want to ask someone to your house, you send an invite. It is not formal. You can send an invite by phone or text message to your friends.

The noun invite is a casual way to request someone's presence. It is very common in spoken English and informal writing, like emails to colleagues you know well or group chat messages.

While invitation is the standard noun, invite has become widely accepted in informal registers. It is particularly useful when discussing social plans where the tone is relaxed and friendly.

The use of invite as a noun is a classic example of linguistic clipping. While traditional grammarians once frowned upon it, it is now firmly established in modern English, though it remains stylistically inappropriate for formal correspondence.

Etymologically, invite demonstrates the tendency of English to convert verbs into nouns. Its usage highlights the shift toward brevity in digital-age communication, distinguishing itself from the more ceremonial invitation.

Palavra em 30 segundos

  • Invite is a casual noun.
  • It means an informal request.
  • Use it with friends.
  • Do not use it for formal events.

Think of an invite as the relaxed, everyday cousin of the word invitation. While an invitation sounds like a fancy card in a thick envelope, an invite is what you send via text message or say over the phone.

Using this word shows you are in a casual, friendly setting. It is the perfect term for planning a movie night, a backyard BBQ, or just asking a friend to grab coffee. It captures the spirit of being welcoming without the fuss of formal etiquette.

The word invite comes from the Latin invitare, which means to treat someone well or to entertain. Over centuries, it evolved into the verb invite, and eventually, the noun form appeared.

The shortened version, invite, became popular in the 20th century as communication became faster and more informal. It reflects how English speakers love to trim long words to make daily conversation quicker and more efficient.

You use invite when you want to sound approachable. Common phrases include 'sending an invite' or 'getting an invite.' It is very common in digital communication, especially on social media platforms or group chats.

Avoid using it in professional settings like weddings or high-stakes business conferences, where the full word invitation is expected. Stick to using it with people you know well.

1. An open invite: A standing offer to join something anytime. Example: You have an open invite to visit us whenever you're in town.

2. Decline an invite: To politely say no. Example: I had to decline the invite because I was busy.

3. Score an invite: To successfully get invited to something exclusive. Example: I managed to score an invite to the concert!

4. Send out an invite: The act of distributing the request. Example: Did you send out the invite for the party yet?

5. A formal invite: Often used ironically to mean something very casual. Example: This text is your formal invite to pizza night.

As a noun, invite is countable. You can have one invite or many invites. It is pronounced with the stress on the second syllable: /ɪnˈvaɪt/.

It rhymes with delight, sight, and night. Remember that when used as a noun, the stress stays on the second syllable, which is a common pattern for many English words that act as both nouns and verbs.

Fun Fact

The word 'invite' was once considered very lazy slang by teachers!

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ɪnˈvaɪt/

Short 'i' sound followed by 'vait' with clear 't'.

US /ɪnˈvaɪt/

Similar to UK, slightly more emphasis on the 'v'.

Common Errors

  • Misplacing stress on the first syllable
  • Dropping the final 't'
  • Mispronouncing the 'v'

Rhymes With

delight sight night bright might

Difficulty Rating

Leitura 1/5

Very easy.

Writing 1/5

Very easy.

Speaking 1/5

Very easy.

Audição 1/5

Very easy.

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

ask party friend

Learn Next

invitation host attend

Avançado

solicit summons convocation

Grammar to Know

Countable Nouns

I have an invite.

Articles (a/an)

An invite.

Formal vs Informal

Invite vs Invitation.

Examples by Level

1

I got an invite to the party.

I received a request to come.

Use 'an' before invite.

1

Did you get my invite?

2

I sent an invite to Sarah.

3

The invite is for Friday.

4

Thanks for the invite!

5

I need to send an invite.

6

Is the invite via email?

7

She lost the invite.

8

Check your invite list.

1

I'm still waiting for an invite to the wedding.

2

He sent a digital invite to everyone.

3

She didn't get an invite to the meeting.

4

It's a last-minute invite.

5

The invite was sent yesterday.

6

I'll forward the invite to you.

7

Don't forget to check the invite.

8

We sent out a group invite.

1

I'm honored by the invite to speak.

2

He extended an invite to the whole team.

3

She declined the invite due to prior plans.

4

The invite included a map.

5

I didn't expect an invite to such an event.

6

We need to finalize the invite list.

7

The invite was lost in the spam folder.

8

He sent a formal-looking invite for a casual dinner.

1

The invite arrived quite unexpectedly.

2

I was surprised to receive an invite from them.

3

Her invite was phrased in a very friendly way.

4

The invite was clearly meant for close friends.

5

He ignored the invite entirely.

6

She framed the invite as a joke.

7

The invite was sent well in advance.

8

I accepted the invite immediately.

1

The invite served as a catalyst for the reunion.

2

Despite the short notice, the invite was well-received.

3

He treated the casual invite with surprising gravity.

4

The invite was a mere formality.

5

She curated the invite list with great care.

6

The invite was couched in warm language.

7

His invite was met with a polite refusal.

8

The invite was a gesture of reconciliation.

Antônimos

rejection refusal exclusion

Colocações comuns

send an invite
get an invite
decline an invite
accept an invite
digital invite
group invite
last-minute invite
formal invite
check the invite
forward an invite

Idioms & Expressions

"An open invite"

Always welcome to join.

You have an open invite to my place.

casual

"Score an invite"

To get invited to something special.

I scored an invite to the party.

casual

"Decline an invite"

Say no to an invitation.

I had to decline the invite.

neutral

"Send out an invite"

Distribute invitations.

We sent out an invite today.

neutral

"Wait for an invite"

To wait to be asked.

Don't wait for an invite, just come.

casual

"Lost the invite"

Forgot or misplaced the details.

I lost the invite, what time is it?

casual

Easily Confused

invite vs invitation

They mean the same thing.

Formality level.

Use invite for friends, invitation for formal events.

invite vs invent

They look similar.

Invent means to create something new.

He invented a machine.

invite vs invest

Similar spelling.

Invest means to put money into something.

I invest in stocks.

invite vs inhibit

Similar start.

Inhibit means to stop or slow down.

It inhibits growth.

Sentence Patterns

A1

I sent an invite to [person].

I sent an invite to John.

A2

Did you get my invite?

Did you get my invite?

B1

I declined the invite.

I declined the invite.

B2

The invite was sent via email.

The invite was sent via email.

C1

She scored an invite to the party.

She scored an invite to the party.

Família de palavras

Nouns

invitation The formal request.

Verbs

invite To ask someone to come.

Adjectives

inviting Attractive or welcoming.

Relacionado

guest The person who receives the invite.

How to Use It

frequency

8

Formality Scale

invitation (formal) invite (casual) text (slang)

Erros comuns

Using 'invite' in a formal wedding card. Use 'invitation'.
Invite is too casual for formal events.
Saying 'I have an invite to the store'. I have an invitation to the store.
Invite is for events, not places.
Confusing verb and noun stress. Both have stress on the second syllable.
Pronunciation is the same.
Using 'invite' as a plural without 's'. Invites.
Needs an 's' for plural.
Thinking 'invite' is a verb only. It is also a noun.
It functions as both.

Tips

💡

When to use it

Use it with friends, not your boss.

💡

Article check

Always use 'an' before invite.

💡

Stress

Stress the second syllable.

💡

History

It started as a verb only.

💡

Practice

Write 3 sentences using it today.

💡

Formality

Don't use it for weddings.

🌍

Digital age

It's perfect for text messages.

💡

Association

Link it to 'invitation'.

💡

Pluralization

It works like any other noun.

💡

Vowels

Make the 'i' sound long.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

IN-VITE: I Need VI-T-E (Very Important Time Event).

Visual Association

A text message bubble on a phone screen.

Word Web

party friend text event social

Desafio

Send a text to a friend using the word 'invite'.

Origem da palavra

Latin

Original meaning: To treat well, to entertain.

Contexto cultural

None, but avoid in formal business contexts.

Very common in US and UK for casual social planning via text.

Often used in pop songs about parties.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Social media

  • Check the invite
  • Accept the invite
  • Decline the invite

Texting

  • Sent you an invite
  • Got the invite?
  • Thanks for the invite

Parties

  • Who is on the invite list?
  • Did you get an invite?

Work

  • Forward the invite
  • Check the calendar invite

Conversation Starters

"Have you ever scored an invite to a cool event?"

"Do you prefer a digital invite or a paper one?"

"Is it hard to decline an invite from a friend?"

"What is the best invite you have ever received?"

"Do you always check your calendar when you get an invite?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a time you were excited to receive an invite.

Describe how you would plan a party and send out invites.

Is it rude to ignore an invite? Why or why not?

How does the word 'invite' change the tone of a message?

Perguntas frequentes

8 perguntas

Yes, it is a noun in informal English.

Only if you are close with your coworkers.

Just add 's' to get 'invites'.

They mean the same thing, but have different formality levels.

Yes, 'I invite you' is the verb form.

No, it is just casual.

Latin 'invitare'.

Yes, use 'an' or 'the'.

Teste-se

fill blank A1

I sent an ___ to my friend.

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: invite

We need the singular noun.

multiple choice A2

Which is correct?

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: An invite

Use 'an' before a vowel sound.

true false B1

Is 'invite' formal?

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: Falso

It is informal.

match pairs B1

Word

Significado

All matched!

Matching synonyms.

sentence order B2

Toque nas palavras abaixo para montar a frase
Correto! Quase. Resposta certa:

Subject-verb-object order.

Pontuação: /5

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