"It's a pleasure to
meet you. I'm Jack."
Another common question to ask is
"What do you do for a living?"
You can respond to this by saying,
"I work at a restaurant."
"I work at a bank."
"I work in a software company."
"I'm a dentist."
Usually, you will not need to ask for a name. It is implied that each person should say their name. But in case they don't, you can ask,
"What is your name?"
Many times, I don't hear the name. If you would like for them to repeat their name, you can say,
"What was that again?"
"Excuse me?"
"Pardon me?"
Greeting Someone you Know
Greeting - Example Conversations
Bored - General Phrases
If you think you are a boring person, here is a way to say that you are boring.
"I think I'm a little boring."
"I'm a boring person."
Boring can be used to describe someone.
"He is a boring person."
"His personality is very boring."
"It's boring whenever she's around."
Using bored to answer a question is very common. Here are some general questions that someone might ask.
"How was your trip?"
"How was your vacation?"
"How was your weekend?"
"How was the lecture?"
"How was the class?"
"How was the game?"
Any of these types of questions can be answered with a simple answer.
"It was pretty boring."
"It was boring. I didn't do much."
"It wasn't as fun as I thought. It was a little boring."
"I was bored most of the time."
"Because it was disorganized, we had too much extra time. I was bored during our free time."
Bored - Calling Someone
As you can see, Even though Jill is very bored, she didn't say that she was bored. To sensitive people, they can misinterpret the situation. If I am bored and I call you, then that could mean that I am only calling you because I have nothing better to do. So if you are not very close friends, it is better to say something like, 'nothing much' instead of 'I am bored.'
If you are very close friends with someone, then the conversation can be more direct and honest.
"What are you doing?"
"I'm doing the laundry."
"I'm so bored. I have nothing to do."
"Why don't you come over and help me with the laundry?"
"I'd rather do my own house chores. Hey, you wanna take a break from your house work and have coffee at Starbucks with me?"
"Sure, that sounds great. I'll meet you there in thirty minutes."
How is your day - Example Conversation
Tomorrow's
Plan - Questions and Answers
Tomorrow's Plan - Example Conversation
Yesterday - The Past - General
Statements
As you can see by some of the examples in the chart, some words change when speaking in the past tense.
Besides some words that change, many times a word with the letter 'd' or 'ed' at the end changes the word to past tense. Here are some examples:
"I was being polite so I opened the door for him."
"I stapled the papers together to keep them organized."
"The paper ripped on the bottom, so I taped them together."
"I switched the presents around because I found out Jane doesn't like red lipstick."
"I was very interested in the topic so I paid close attention."
The tricky part is to know when to add a 'd' to the end of a word to make it past tense. There are exceptions that can cause confusion, for example,
"I rode my bike to school." It would be incorrect to say, 'I rided...'
"I built the house from scratch." Incorrect way is to say, 'I builded...'
"I sat on the chair next to the emergency exit." Incorrect way is to say, 'sitted...'
So remember to use past tense words correctly or the other person might not understand what you are saying.
Yesterday - The Past - Questions
and Answers
Weather - Summer and Autumn
Summer:
Depending on the location, summer can be warm and pleasant or unbearably hot and humid. Although you will describe summer in one particular way, you should be aware of how other people describe summer in different parts of the world.
InNevada , Arizona ,
Egypt ,
or other places that are like deserts, people might say,
"Summer is very hot and dry. It's not so bad when we are in the shade."
"Summer is extremely hot. The sun will burn you if you don't wear sunscreen."
"Because it's not humid, it is easy to get used to."
InSeattle , the
summer is the best season,
"Summer is the only time of year that it doesn't rain much."
"Summer is like paradise in Seattle."
"If summer wasn't so good here, I would move to a different city."
InNew York , Korea , or other hot and humid
places, people can say,
"Summer is both hot and humid here."
"I am always sticky because I sweat so much during the summer."
"Without air conditioning, I don't know how I would survive."
Spring and Fall / Autumn
From my perception, I noticed that spring and autumn are generally pleasant seasons for many areas of the world. I haven't heard enough to say one way or another, so I can only write down what I know.
"My favorite season is autumn."
"The only reason I don't like the fall is due to all the leaves I have to rake up."
"Fall is so beautiful because of all the different color leaves everywhere."
"It rains a lot around here during the fall."
"It gets cold in late autumn."
"In our country, autumn is just like summer. It's hot and humid."
"My favorite season is spring because of the budding flowers."
"I love the spring because it's not cold nor hot."
"The spring season here causes a lot of people to sneeze due to all the flowers appearing. Many people with allergies hate the spring."
Weather -
Winter
Cold places:
"It's freezing out."
"It doesn't snow often, but when it does, it stays around for several weeks because it stays cold."
"For 3 months, this city will be covered with a layer of snow because it will never melt."
"It doesn't get too cold here, but it's always raining and very gloomy."
"The winter here is cold and dry. We hardly get any precipitation."
Weather - Long Description
Question: "Which season do you like the most?"
Small Talk - Two Example Dialogs
Movies - Asking Friend
Movies Types - Action and Drama
Action: Movies with lots of fighting, shooting, exploding, etc.
"What type of movie do you like?"
"I like action movies because they are fast paced."
"Action movies are my favorite."
"I like all the action movies with a lot of guns."
"I like fight scenes that are choreographed."
Drama: Everyone knows drama. Like Titanic and Schindler's List
"What type of movies do you like?"
"I like all sorts of drama."
"I like movies that play with my emotion."
"Drama movies are great because they are the most realistic."
"The sad drama movies that make me cry."
Movie Types - Comedy and Horror
Movie Discussion - Describing a
Movie
Good Scene:
"I love the scene when Russell Crowe showed his face to the emperor after the first gladiator fight."
"What did you think about the last fight scene between Neo and Agent Smith in the rain?"
"The courtroom scene between Jodie Foster and Richard Gere was absolutely amazing."
Great Movie:
"That was such a cool movie. It was the best movie I've seen in a long time."
"Anytime I see a great movie I tend to look at my watch often. That's because I don't want the movie to end."
"The movie was great. I liked everything about it. I'm definitely going to buy the dvd."
Situational questions:
"What would you have done? Would you have taken the million dollars and give up your wife for a night?"
"Would you choose money and fame, or family and stability?"
Some movies are known to be 'based on a true story.' These types of movies are very interesting because they actually happened. The only reason they are not considered to be a non-fiction movie is because the director or writer will add some scenes that didn't happen, or change some facts around so the movie is more appealing to the masses.
A conversation can start from movies such as Schindler's List. When coming out of a theatre, I heard a couple talk briefly about this.
"What did you think about the movie?"
"I thought it was great. It was very powerful."
"How much of it do you think was true?"
"I learned about Germany and World War II in one of my classes, and this movie showed everything I learned from class."
"Wow. It's amazing that these things have happened in our history."
Movie Discussion - Example Dialog
Hobby
- Questions and Answers
Answering questions:
"My hobbies consist of golfing, reading novels, and watching movies."
"I like to play computer games in my free time."
"If I'm not working, then I'm busy chatting with people on the Internet."
"During my spare time, I like to cook."
"I like to read magazines."
"In the summer I play golf, and in the winter, I go skiing."
"I love every type of sports."
Making statements:
"I need to find a hobby. I have nothing to do all day."
"Maybe you wouldn't be so lonely if you had a hobby."
"Hobbies are great because it allows you to do what you enjoy."
"Although I have many hobbies, I wish I had more time to do more."
"I love to go snowboarding. It's exhilarating."
"I would go skiing more often, but it takes such a long time to go up to the mountains."
"I wish golfing wasn't so expensive. I would golf almost everyday if I could afford it."
Hobby - Various
Q&A
Exercise - Questions
Exercise - Walking Jogging and
More
"I usually play a lot of basketball"
"I get enough exercise from soccer."
"I like to play sports because it is a good form of exercise and allows me to have fun all at the same time."
"Although bowling is a sport, I don't consider it a form of exercise."
"I play volleyball a couple hours a day."
"I practice baseball with my school team everyday."
"I'm in my high school's track and field team. I'm a long distance runner."
"I don't play soccer because it requires too much running."
"Running constantly is a hard thing to do."
Others
"Aerobics is an excellent form of exercise."
"I use a video at home to do my aerobic sessions."
"I like to do aerobics because it targets specific areas."
"I get my exercise from rowing. I'm on the junior varsity crew team."
"I ride my bicycle to work every day."
"I take the stairs because it gives me a little bit of a work out."
"I go to the local park and ride my rollerblades."
Exercise Gym - Questions and
Answers
Machine Problems
Mail Room
I'm Busy
Giving/Asking Business Cards
General
Office
A Little Late
Very Late
Sick day
Vacation
Software
Internet
General
Computer Sentences
Asking for Email Address
Requesting information through
email
"I am getting a mail saying it is undeliverable. I might have misspelled it. Can I double check your email address?"
"The email address I sent it to was someone@hotmail.com. Is this correct?"
"I sent the email to someone@hotmail.com. Didn't you get it?"
"That's the wrong email address. My email address is someone@hotmail.net."
Email Problems
Reply and
Reply All
Forwarding Mail
General email sentences
Explanation
From here, it is basically listing steps.
1. "The first thing you need to do is find a sellers agent."
2. "The agent will list your house on the market."
3. "After the house is on the market, people who are looking to buy a house will find a buyers agent."
4. "The buyers agent looks through the list of houses for sale posted by the sellers agent."
5. "The buyers agent shows your house to potential buyers."
6. "When someone makes an offer, the buyers agent will let the sellers agent know about the price that the buyer has offered."
7. "After everyone agrees, the house is sold."
8. "The price associated with selling a house is based on commission."
9. "The sellers agent will get an average of 2.5 percent of the selling price and the buyers agent will get 2.5 percent as well."
10. "If the price of the house was $300,000, then each agent will get $7500, costing you a total of $15,000."
This list seems pretty simple now. Each sentence is relatively short. There is no difference between the long paragraph and the listed out items. Both contain the same words. All I did was put them together.
Finally, if you feel that you cannot create these sentences even in a list form, use an example that you are familiar with. I'm sure you will have an easy time creating a list if the topic is in your area of expertise.
I recommend listening to the paragraph again. But this time, listen to the speed I talk. Also, listen to the pauses after each sentence. Notice that I don't have unnecessary words like 'and', 'moreover', 'furthermore', 'Afterwards', and so on. These are good words, but you don't need them that much when you are explaining something verbally. Using pauses between sentences and speaking clearly and slowly is the best way to communicate an explanation.
Presentation
Before the meeting
Canceling a Meeting
Phone Call
This example is very clear, organized, and concise. It first explains who the person is, what they are doing, and what they need. If you need to call someone to obtain information, you can use this type of sentence.
Let's try one more, but this time, you are asking for help.
"Hi Bob. This is Steven from ABC Company. I'm calling in regards to the data entry program you created. I'm having trouble locating where the connection is made to the server. Can you help me with this?"
Similarly, this phone call starts with an introduction of the person, a quick sentence on what the call is regarding, and a short description on what this person needs. If you are in this situation, use this process and write it down so you can say what you need smoothly. After you become familiar with it, you will not need to write it down anymore and you should be able to say it fluently.
If you have questions and a consultant or another business employee is visiting your company, then asking a question to them is very similar to asking a question to anyone else.
"Hi Bob. I'm George. I'm the technical writer for this project. I had a question regarding the installation process. If you have a minute, can you show me the installation process? I'm having problems on the confirmation section."
Usually, when a person is visiting your company, then it is polite to tell them your position so they can understand what type of help you will need. In the previous example, we used the same process of asking for help with an introduction, telling them what it is regarding, and what the problem or question is.
Verifying Information
Sometimes you have to verify an order, or double check a figure. If you have the information and you just want to verify that it is accurate, then you can use these types of sentences.
"Hi Debra, I'm analyzing the log files and noticed entry 14 was negative 42. Can you confirm if this is accurate?"
"I see that our April 2003 revenue was 1.2 million dollars. Can you double check that this figure is accurate?"
"I am going to meet with the CFO in an hour. Can you look through this report and double check my findings? It should only take you 20 minutes or so."
Telling person you will call them
back
Redirecting
Sending and receiving information
Confirming your Flight
If you are taking a plane to travel,
then you will be calling a travel agent and purchasing a ticket in your own
country. We will not cover this portion because you can do it in your own
language. But once you arrive to your English speaking location, you might need
to change your flight and talk to English speaking people. More likely, they
will have people speaking your language, but just in case, we will cover some
general topics about air traveling here.
Finding the Gate
Insurance and Driver License
Price and
Rules
Making a Reservation
Making a
Reservation II
Making a Reservation III
Checking In and Checking Out
General Things
Talking to Co-Workers
Asking for help or offering help
Complaining
about another co-worker to a co-worker
"If you have to work with Jake, remember the things I told you."
"Is management blind or am I being too sensitive about this?"
"I think the manager likes him because he kisses her ass all day long."
Kissing ass refers to butt kiss and brown nosing. Basically, a person who butt kisses is a person always saying good things to the manager, giving compliments, showing off in front of the manager, and doing anything possible to look good.
"The manager is blind because he is a total brown-noser."
"I can't believe this company is paying $75,000 a year for this fool."
Complaining about the company
Talking about work experience
Talking
to the Boss
Complaining and Showing
Frustration
Talking to your boss about another boss
If another boss is giving you a hard time, you can tell your manager what you think. Here are some professional sentences that you can use to show your frustration about another boss.
"I'm having some problems with John lately. He is very critical and puts me down in public. I don't know what I am doing wrong so I don't know where I need to improve. What do you think I should do about this?"
"John has been very difficult to work with. He is very bossy and expects everything to be done his way. I have been tolerating it because he is a manager, but some of his methods are wasting a lot of time. I always suggest other ways, but he will not hear me out."
Deadline
First time business trip Q's
Talking to people
These previous questions should only be used in rare cases the other person doesn't tell you. The next couple of sentences are more likely.
"Who should I contact if I have a question regarding inaccurate data?"
"Who should I contact if I have a question with this type of problem?"
"I am going to be calling my manager frequently with critical updates. What phone should I use?"
"How long does it take to get to the airport from here?"
"How bad is the traffic around this time to the airport?"
"Where is the closest place to eat around here?"
"Is there a fast food restaurant near by?"
"Does this building have a cafeteria?"
"Do you have a cafeteria close by?"
Eating during the Business Trip
Office and Cubicles
Cubicles
Office
Quitting or Leaving Work
General Statements
Asking for Directions
Left Right and Around the Corner
Light and 'Y'
Another common question to ask is
"What do you do for a living?"
You can respond to this by saying,
"I work at a restaurant."
"I work at a bank."
"I work in a software company."
"I'm a dentist."
Usually, you will not need to ask for a name. It is implied that each person should say their name. But in case they don't, you can ask,
"What is your name?"
Many times, I don't hear the name. If you would like for them to repeat their name, you can say,
"What was that again?"
"Excuse me?"
"Pardon me?"
Greeting Someone you Know
"Hey John, how have
you been?"
"Hi Bob, how are you?"
"Hi Nancy, what have you been up to?"
"Andy, it's been a long time, how are you man?"
If you meet someone unexpectedly, you can say,
"Hey Jack, it's good to see you. What are you doing here?"
or
"What a surprise. I haven't seen you in a long time. How have you been?"
If you see the person at a restaurant, you can say, "Do you come to this restaurant often?"
Or at the movie theatre, "What movie did you come to see?"
"Hi Bob, how are you?"
"Hi Nancy, what have you been up to?"
"Andy, it's been a long time, how are you man?"
If you meet someone unexpectedly, you can say,
"Hey Jack, it's good to see you. What are you doing here?"
or
"What a surprise. I haven't seen you in a long time. How have you been?"
If you see the person at a restaurant, you can say, "Do you come to this restaurant often?"
Or at the movie theatre, "What movie did you come to see?"
"I heard a lot
about you from John. He had a lot of good things to say."
"Wow. How long has it been? It seems like more than a year. I'm doing pretty well. How about you?"
A typical response to this type of greeting is simple.
"Not too bad."
"Wow. How long has it been? It seems like more than a year. I'm doing pretty well. How about you?"
A typical response to this type of greeting is simple.
"Not too bad."
If asked what you have been up to, you
can respond with, "Same ole same ole."
Or, "The same as usual."
Here are some other example responses.
"I'm pretty busy at work these days, but otherwise, everything is great."
"I'm doing very well."
"I finally have some free time. I just finished taking a big examination, and I'm so relieved that I'm done with it."
Restaurant Responses
"I've been here a couple of times, but I don't come on a regular basis."
"I come pretty often. This is my favorite restaurant."
"I can't believe we haven't seen each other before. I come here at least twice a week."
Here are some other example responses.
"I'm pretty busy at work these days, but otherwise, everything is great."
"I'm doing very well."
"I finally have some free time. I just finished taking a big examination, and I'm so relieved that I'm done with it."
Restaurant Responses
"I've been here a couple of times, but I don't come on a regular basis."
"I come pretty often. This is my favorite restaurant."
"I can't believe we haven't seen each other before. I come here at least twice a week."
Greeting - Example Conversations
Let's look at several example
conversations. Then we can move on to the practice section.
Person A: "Hi, my name is Steve. It's nice to meet you."
Person B: "I'm Jack. It's a pleasure to meet you, Steve."
Person A: "What do you do for a living Jack?"
Person B: "I work at the bank."
Person A: "What is your name?"
Person B: "Jackson."
Person A: "What was that again?"
Person A: "Hey John, how have you been?"
Person B: "What a surprise. I haven't seen you in a long time. How have you been?"
Person A: "I'm doing very well. How about you?"
Person B: "I finally have some free time. I just finished taking a big examination, and I'm so relieved that I'm done with it."
Person A: "Hi Nancy, what have you been up to?"
Person B: "The same ole same ole." Or, "The same as usual. How about you?"
Person A: "I'm pretty busy at work these days, but otherwise, everything is great."
Person A: "Andy, it's been a long time, how are you man?"
Person B: "What a surprise. I haven't seen you in a long time. How have you been?"
Person A: "Do you come to this restaurant often?"
Person B: "I've been here a couple of times, but I don't come on a regular basis."
Person A: "Hi, my name is Steve. It's nice to meet you."
Person B: "I'm Jack. It's a pleasure to meet you, Steve."
Person A: "What do you do for a living Jack?"
Person B: "I work at the bank."
Person A: "What is your name?"
Person B: "Jackson."
Person A: "What was that again?"
Person A: "Hey John, how have you been?"
Person B: "What a surprise. I haven't seen you in a long time. How have you been?"
Person A: "I'm doing very well. How about you?"
Person B: "I finally have some free time. I just finished taking a big examination, and I'm so relieved that I'm done with it."
Person A: "Hi Nancy, what have you been up to?"
Person B: "The same ole same ole." Or, "The same as usual. How about you?"
Person A: "I'm pretty busy at work these days, but otherwise, everything is great."
Person A: "Andy, it's been a long time, how are you man?"
Person B: "What a surprise. I haven't seen you in a long time. How have you been?"
Person A: "Do you come to this restaurant often?"
Person B: "I've been here a couple of times, but I don't come on a regular basis."
Greeting - Interactive Practice
Click on Listen All and follow along. After
becoming comfortable with the entire conversation, become Person A by clicking
on the Person A button. You will hear only Person B through the audio file.
There will be a silence for you to repeat the sentences of Person A. Do the
same for Person B. The speed of the conversation is native speed. Use the pause
button if the pause between each sentence is too fast for you. After practicing
several times, you will be able to speak as fast as a native.
1
A: "Hi, how are you doing?"
B: "I'm doing great. How about you?"
A: "Not too bad."
B: "Do you come to this restaurant
often?"
A: "I've been here a couple of times, but I
don't come on a regular basis. What have you been up to?"
B: "I'm pretty busy at work these days, but otherwise,
everything is great."
A: "Well, have a good evening."
B: "You too."
2
A: "It's nice to meet you. My name is
Jack."
B: "I'm Steve. It's a pleasure to meet
you."
A: "What was your name again?"
B: "Steve."
A: "So Steve, What do you do for a living?"
B: "I work at the public library. How about
you?"
A: "I'm a University student."
B: "That's great. It was nice meeting
you."
A: "Yeah. It was a pleasure meeting you."
3
A: "Hey Jack, it's good to see you."
B: "Wow. How long has it been? It seems like
more than a year. I'm doing pretty well. How about you?"
A: "Not too bad."
B: "What movie did you come to see?"
A: "I came here to see Matrix Revolution. How
about you?"
B: "I'm going to watch Finding Nemo."
Bored - General Phrases
Being bored
means having nothing to do. When someone is bored, they often call people and
try to entertain themselves or try to find something to do with a friend. So
being bored is a good starting point for conversational English.
There are a couple of situations you can express to someone that you are bored. Most commonly, you will call a friend and tell them that you are bored or ask them to do something together. The other time is when someone asks you how you are doing. We will cover both situations in this session.
General Phrases
"I'm dying from boredom."
"I hate being bored."
"I don't have anything to do."
"My life is so boring."
"Life is so boring."
"I'm just watching TV until I find something to do."
"I was bored all weekend."
"I am so bored today."
"I get bored very easily."
"I get bored all the time."
A common place to get bored is when you have to visit family members.
"It's always boring whenever we go to our relatives."
"It's nice to visit my grandmother, but it gets boring after a couple of hours."
"My cousins are so boring. All they do is watch tv."
"There's nothing to do in the country side. I'm always bored there."
There are a couple of situations you can express to someone that you are bored. Most commonly, you will call a friend and tell them that you are bored or ask them to do something together. The other time is when someone asks you how you are doing. We will cover both situations in this session.
General Phrases
"I'm dying from boredom."
"I hate being bored."
"I don't have anything to do."
"My life is so boring."
"Life is so boring."
"I'm just watching TV until I find something to do."
"I was bored all weekend."
"I am so bored today."
"I get bored very easily."
"I get bored all the time."
A common place to get bored is when you have to visit family members.
"It's always boring whenever we go to our relatives."
"It's nice to visit my grandmother, but it gets boring after a couple of hours."
"My cousins are so boring. All they do is watch tv."
"There's nothing to do in the country side. I'm always bored there."
If you think you are a boring person, here is a way to say that you are boring.
"I think I'm a little boring."
"I'm a boring person."
Boring can be used to describe someone.
"He is a boring person."
"His personality is very boring."
"It's boring whenever she's around."
Using bored to answer a question is very common. Here are some general questions that someone might ask.
"How was your trip?"
"How was your vacation?"
"How was your weekend?"
"How was the lecture?"
"How was the class?"
"How was the game?"
Any of these types of questions can be answered with a simple answer.
"It was pretty boring."
"It was boring. I didn't do much."
"It wasn't as fun as I thought. It was a little boring."
"I was bored most of the time."
"Because it was disorganized, we had too much extra time. I was bored during our free time."
Bored - Calling Someone
The conversation
when you call someone might sound something like this.
"Hello"
"Hi Jane, this is Jill. Do you have time to talk?"
"Hi Jill, sure, I was just watching TV."
"What are you watching?"
"I was just watching a re-run of friends. How about you? What are you doing?"
"Nothing much. I really wanted to start studying for the Psychology test coming up, but I can't seem to motivate myself."
"Hello"
"Hi Jane, this is Jill. Do you have time to talk?"
"Hi Jill, sure, I was just watching TV."
"What are you watching?"
"I was just watching a re-run of friends. How about you? What are you doing?"
"Nothing much. I really wanted to start studying for the Psychology test coming up, but I can't seem to motivate myself."
As you can see, Even though Jill is very bored, she didn't say that she was bored. To sensitive people, they can misinterpret the situation. If I am bored and I call you, then that could mean that I am only calling you because I have nothing better to do. So if you are not very close friends, it is better to say something like, 'nothing much' instead of 'I am bored.'
If you are very close friends with someone, then the conversation can be more direct and honest.
"What are you doing?"
"I'm doing the laundry."
"I'm so bored. I have nothing to do."
"Why don't you come over and help me with the laundry?"
"I'd rather do my own house chores. Hey, you wanna take a break from your house work and have coffee at Starbucks with me?"
"Sure, that sounds great. I'll meet you there in thirty minutes."
Bored -
Boring Work
A different
situation you can tell someone you are bored is when you are simply talking with
a friend concerning a part of your life that is boring. For example, if you
have a boring job, you can explain to your friend how boring it is.
"How is your work these days?"
"Work is so boring that I'm going crazy."
"I ran out of things to do and management is too busy
to give me more work. I tried to find things to do with no luck. I'm basically
sitting in my chair pretending to work."
"That sounds so boring."
"Tell me about it. Time goes so slow when you're bored.
I'd rather be busy. Then at least the day would go by faster."
Similar
type of boring work is when doing something that is routine. Some sentences
expressing boring work are:
"I'm doing the same thing over and over again."
"My work is so repetitious that I am getting bored of
it."
"My work does not interest me."
"I'm only working to pay the bills."
"I wish I had your job."
Because
some people are so busy, they envy people who have nothing to do at work.
"I'm so bored. I have nothing to do at work. I just
surf the Internet all day long."
"Dang! I'm so busy at work, it's driving me crazy. I
really wish I had your job."
Bored - Interactive
Practice
1
A: "Hey there.
What have you been up to?"
B: "Nothing
really."
A: "How about your
work?"
B: "It's so boring
there. I really wish I had a different job."
A: "Is it really
that bad?"
B: "Yeah. Most of
the time, I have nothing to do. But whenever I have something to do, it's
boring work because it is the same old thing."
A: "Why don't you
find a different job then?"
B: "Maybe I
should."
2
A: "Hi Steve,
what's your plan for tonight?"
B: "I don't have
any plans. Are you doing anything special?"
A: "Well, if
you're bored, let's plan on meeting up tonight."
B: "That sounds
like a good idea. Should we invite Bob?"
A: "He's a little
boring."
B: "What do you
mean?"
A: "Well, he
doesn't drink, play video games, pool, or really anything. The only thing he
talks about is history."
B: "You do have a
point. We'll leave him out tonight."
A: "Aright. Let's
meet at 8:30 in front of the university bookstore."
B: "Perfect. I'll
see you later tonight."
3
A: "Hello"
B: "Hi Jane"
A: "Oh, hi
Jill."
B: "What are you
doing?"
A: "I'm doing the
laundry."
B: "I'm so bored.
I have nothing to do."
A: "Why don't you
come over and help me with the laundry?"
B: "I'd rather do
my own house chores. Hey, you wanna take a break from your house work and have
coffee at Starbucks with me?"
A: "Sure, that
sounds great. I'll meet you there in thirty minutes."
How is your Day - General Statements
In this lesson, we are
going to learn how to communicate to someone using the present tense. However,
because this isn't a site teaching grammar, I do not want to spend too much
time on details. I wanted to include this section primarily to show many
different sentences using present tense and to have a dedicated practice
section with only present tense sentences.
This lesson is a little
shorter than others because speaking in the present tense is not as common as
speaking in the future or past tense. Although speaking in the future tense or
the past tense is more common, it is still important to know how to communicate
in the present tense. Here are some example sentences:
"I see Bob over there by the newspaper stand."
"I'm going to the library."
"I'm on my way home."
"I'm going to the bus stop."
"Jack is going to the store."
"Jill is stopping by now."
"The meeting is starting now."
"The manager is waiting for you in her office."
"Tell the receptionist that you are here to see Mr. Hwang."
Questions:
A very common question
you will run into is,
"How are you doing?"
"How is your day going?"
"What are you doing now?"
To answer these types
of question, you must remember that you are talking about what is currently
going on now, so you must use the present tense.
Here are some ways to
answer the above question.
"I'm enjoying the beautiful weather without any worries in the
world."
"I'm playing a video game on my computer because I have nothing to
do."
"I'm at the grocery store buying ingredients for tonight's
dinner."
"I'm at the gym working out."
As you can see, each
sentence is starting with, 'I am' instead of 'I will be' or 'I was.' We will
discuss past tense and future tense in the next sessions.
More descriptive answers
you can give are the following:
"I'm pretty busy now. I'm doing my homework because I have an exam
tomorrow."
"My project deadline is coming up, so I'm currently in the process
of finishing my tasks."
"I'm taking the day off from work today because I have so many
errands. I'm going to the post office to send some packages to my
friends."
"I'm looking for a job. The job market does not look that great,
but I can't give up."
"I'm applying for a job at a consulting firm in Taiwan ."
"I'm listening to music while thinking about my
situation."
How is your day - Example Conversation
The present
tense is more common in writing. As you can see by all the explanations I am
giving, they are all written in the present tense. That is because it is
instructional. Instructional writing is more commonly written in present tense.
However, stories in novels are written in past tense.
The reason past and future tense is used more commonly than present tense when speaking is because usually you are telling someone what you have done or what you plan on doing. Speaking in the present tense is used primarily to tell someone what you are currently doing.
As in previous lessons in 'Bored and Greeting' it is very common to have a conversation using the present tense when you run into somebody or when you make or receive a phone call.
Person A: "Hi Jack. What are you doing?"
Person B: "Hi Mary. I'm filling out a job application."
Person A: "Are you finished with school already?"
Person B: "No. I have one more semester, but it would be great to have a job lined up."
Person A: "How is your day going?"
Person B: "Quite busy. I'm preparing for my presentation tomorrow on our marketing strategy. I'm not even half done yet."
Person A: "You must feel stressed out now."
Person B: "That's an understatement."
Person A: "What are you doing now?"
Person B: "I'm playing pool with my friends at a pool hall."
Person A: "I didn't know you play pool. Are you having fun?"
Person B: "I'm having a great time. How about you? What are you doing?"
Person A: "I'm taking a break from my homework. There seems to be no end to the amount of work I have to do."
Person B: "I'm glad I'm not in your shoes."
The reason past and future tense is used more commonly than present tense when speaking is because usually you are telling someone what you have done or what you plan on doing. Speaking in the present tense is used primarily to tell someone what you are currently doing.
As in previous lessons in 'Bored and Greeting' it is very common to have a conversation using the present tense when you run into somebody or when you make or receive a phone call.
Person A: "Hi Jack. What are you doing?"
Person B: "Hi Mary. I'm filling out a job application."
Person A: "Are you finished with school already?"
Person B: "No. I have one more semester, but it would be great to have a job lined up."
Person A: "How is your day going?"
Person B: "Quite busy. I'm preparing for my presentation tomorrow on our marketing strategy. I'm not even half done yet."
Person A: "You must feel stressed out now."
Person B: "That's an understatement."
Person A: "What are you doing now?"
Person B: "I'm playing pool with my friends at a pool hall."
Person A: "I didn't know you play pool. Are you having fun?"
Person B: "I'm having a great time. How about you? What are you doing?"
Person A: "I'm taking a break from my homework. There seems to be no end to the amount of work I have to do."
Person B: "I'm glad I'm not in your shoes."
How is your day - Interactive Practice
1
A: "What are you
doing now?"
B: "I'm watching
TV."
A: "What are you
watching?"
B: "I'm watching
Friends. What are you doing?"
A: "I'm doing my
homework, but I really need to take a break."
B: "You want to do
something?"
A: "Yes. But I
shouldn't. I got to finish my assignment now."
B: "Alright. Call
me later then."
A: "OK. Bye."
2
A: "Where are you
going now?"
B: "I'm going to
the bank."
A: "Aren't you
supposed to be at work?"
B: "I'm working
now. I'm making a deposit for our company."
A: "Where do you
work?"
B: "I work for a
restaurant as a controller."
A: "Wow. That's
great."
B: "Great seeing
you. I have to go now. I'll talk to you later."
3
A: "Hi Steve. What
are you doing here?"
B: "I'm meeting a
friend here for dinner. How about you?"
A: "I'm on my way
home but I needed to stop by the book store to buy a text book."
B: "Didn't you
finish school yet?"
A: "I have one
more year, and then I'm done."
B: "What are you
majoring in?"
A: "I'm majoring
in Sociology"
B: "How do you
like your major?"
A: "I really find
the subject very interesting. I'm enjoying all my classes."
B: "That's
great."
A: "I better go
now. I don't want to miss the bus."
B: "Aright, I'll
talk to you later."
A: "Okay. See you
later."
Tomorrow's
Plan - I am going to
Talking about the
future is something that is done very frequently. Whether we are talking about
our dreams or simply telling someone what we will do tomorrow is all spoken in
the future tense. As in the previous lesson, this isn't a grammar lesson. This
lesson is to provide many different sentences using the future tense.
In the previous lesson,
we concentrated on present tense using 'I am'
When we speak in the
future tense, we can still use 'I am' but it is important what follows the two
words that will make it future tense. Here are a couple of examples.
"I'm
going to see Bob tomorrow"
"I'm
going to meet John at the airport at 6 O'clock tonight"
"I'm
going to go home in an hour"
"I'm
going to go to the bus stop right after class"
"I'm
going to do that tomorrow"
When using 'going to'
after 'I am' it is important that a future indicator is present. For example,
if I say, 'I am going to meet John', this can also be present tense that we
practiced previously. But if you add a future indicator like 'at 6 O'clock
tonight' then it becomes future tense.
Other future tense
indicators are:
'going
to go'
'going
to be'
'I
will'
'I
have to'
Let's practice using
these words:
"I'm
going to be dead if I don't finish this project by tomorrow"
"I'm
going to go home next week"
"I'll
meet you there at five"
"I
can't go tonight because I have to work late"
Tomorrow's
Plan - Questions and Answers
When asking
questions about the future, you can ask questions like:
"What are you going to do tonight?"
"What are you doing next week?"
"When do you plan on doing your homework?"
"When are you going to eat dinner?"
"What time do we have to leave for the airport?"
"What should we do tonight?"
There are many different questions you can ask. By changing a few words, you can make numerous questions properly about the future.
When you are answering questions that relate to the future, remember to use the future tense. Here are some ways to answer the questions directly above:
"What are you going to do tonight?"
"I plan on meeting John after dinner. We're going to go to a night club."
"I'm going to go to take my girlfriend out to dinner. And if we have time, we might try to see a movie."
"What are you doing next week?"
"Since I'm on vacation next week, I plan on going to Pusan to visit some friends down there."
"Next week I have to go shopping for all the Christmas presents. I have to buy a present for my dad, mom, and my two sisters."
"When do you plan on doing your homework?"
"I think I'm going to do my homework after I watch the world cup. I don't think I'll be able to concentrate until after the game is over."
"I'm so unmotivated to do my homework. But I'll eventually have to do it, so I'll get around to them probably after dinner."
"What time do you have to leave for the airport?"
"The flight comes in at 4:30, so I plan on leaving at about 3:30"
"The security is pretty tight so I should get there early. I plan on arriving there 2 hours before my flight leaves."
"What are you going to do tonight?"
"What are you doing next week?"
"When do you plan on doing your homework?"
"When are you going to eat dinner?"
"What time do we have to leave for the airport?"
"What should we do tonight?"
There are many different questions you can ask. By changing a few words, you can make numerous questions properly about the future.
When you are answering questions that relate to the future, remember to use the future tense. Here are some ways to answer the questions directly above:
"What are you going to do tonight?"
"I plan on meeting John after dinner. We're going to go to a night club."
"I'm going to go to take my girlfriend out to dinner. And if we have time, we might try to see a movie."
"What are you doing next week?"
"Since I'm on vacation next week, I plan on going to Pusan to visit some friends down there."
"Next week I have to go shopping for all the Christmas presents. I have to buy a present for my dad, mom, and my two sisters."
"When do you plan on doing your homework?"
"I think I'm going to do my homework after I watch the world cup. I don't think I'll be able to concentrate until after the game is over."
"I'm so unmotivated to do my homework. But I'll eventually have to do it, so I'll get around to them probably after dinner."
"What time do you have to leave for the airport?"
"The flight comes in at 4:30, so I plan on leaving at about 3:30"
"The security is pretty tight so I should get there early. I plan on arriving there 2 hours before my flight leaves."
"What should we
do tonight?"
"After dinner, let's go grab a couple of beers. Then we can go shopping for a couple of hours, and afterwards, we can rent a video and watch it at my place."
"I'm pretty busy tonight. I have to do the laundry, vacuum, and then make dinner, so I won't be able to meet you tonight."
"After dinner, let's go grab a couple of beers. Then we can go shopping for a couple of hours, and afterwards, we can rent a video and watch it at my place."
"I'm pretty busy tonight. I have to do the laundry, vacuum, and then make dinner, so I won't be able to meet you tonight."
Tomorrow's Plan - Example Conversation
Let's use
this time to incorporate what we have learned so far.
Person A: "Bob is in the hospital, did you get a chance to visit him?"
Person B: "I'm going to see Bob tomorrow"
Person A: "I thought you had to meet John tomorrow?"
Person B: "I'm going to meet John at the airport at 6 O'clock tonight"
Person A: "I'm going home now, do you want to head out together?"
Person B: "No Thanks. I'm going to go home in about an hour"/
Person A: "Didn't you need to buy a present for you brother's birthday?"
Person B: "I'm going to do that tomorrow"
Person A: "I'm going to go to the bus stop right after class, so I won't have time to meet you"
Person B: "That's OK. We can always get together tomorrow."
Person A: "Why do you look so stressed?"
Person B: "I'm going to be dead if I don't finish this project by tomorrow"
Person A: "I thought you had 2 weeks to finish this project"
Person B: "I don't have time to explain now. I'll talk to you later."
Person A: "Since we are done with school, when are you going back home?"
Person B: "I'm going to go home next week"
Person A: "Me too. Do you want to meet at the train station on Sunday?"
Person B: "Sure. I'll meet you there at five"
Practice asking questions:
"What are you going to do tonight?"
"What are you doing next week?"
"When do you plan on doing your homework?"
"When are you going to eat dinner?"
"What time do we have to leave for the airport?"
"What should we do tonight?"
Person A: "Bob is in the hospital, did you get a chance to visit him?"
Person B: "I'm going to see Bob tomorrow"
Person A: "I thought you had to meet John tomorrow?"
Person B: "I'm going to meet John at the airport at 6 O'clock tonight"
Person A: "I'm going home now, do you want to head out together?"
Person B: "No Thanks. I'm going to go home in about an hour"/
Person A: "Didn't you need to buy a present for you brother's birthday?"
Person B: "I'm going to do that tomorrow"
Person A: "I'm going to go to the bus stop right after class, so I won't have time to meet you"
Person B: "That's OK. We can always get together tomorrow."
Person A: "Why do you look so stressed?"
Person B: "I'm going to be dead if I don't finish this project by tomorrow"
Person A: "I thought you had 2 weeks to finish this project"
Person B: "I don't have time to explain now. I'll talk to you later."
Person A: "Since we are done with school, when are you going back home?"
Person B: "I'm going to go home next week"
Person A: "Me too. Do you want to meet at the train station on Sunday?"
Person B: "Sure. I'll meet you there at five"
Practice asking questions:
"What are you going to do tonight?"
"What are you doing next week?"
"When do you plan on doing your homework?"
"When are you going to eat dinner?"
"What time do we have to leave for the airport?"
"What should we do tonight?"
Tomorrow's Plan - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Do you have
any plans tonight?"
B: "I have class
until 5 O'clock, but I'm free after that."
A: "Do you want to
grab dinner?"
B: "I don't have
any dinner plans so that sounds great."
A: "What time should
we meet?"
B: "I need to go
to the book store first, so let's meet at 6 O'clock."
2
A: "Let's go to
Everland next week"
B: "I can't. I'm
way too busy."
A: "What are you
doing next week?"
B: "On Monday, I'm
going to meet my professor. Tuesday, I have a job interview. Wednesday, I'm
going to the dentist. And on Thursday, I have to go visit my parents."
A: "Why are you so
busy?"
B: "I've been
procrastinating for a long time."
3
A: "What are you
doing over the weekend?"
B: "I'm going to
exercise, meet some friends, and then watch tv."
A: "Who are you
going to meet?"
B: "My friend from
middle school is visiting, so we are going to have dinner on Saturday."
A: "How long is he
going to stay?"
B: "He is only
here for a day."
A: "Where are you
going to eat dinner?"
B: "I plan on
taking him to an Italian restaurant."
Yesterday - The Past - General
Statements
In daily conversation, talking about the past is done very
frequently. Whenever you meet a friend, you always tell each other what you
have been doing recently. Friends are always interested in each other so they
want to know how you have been spending your time in the past.
Today's lesson is going to target past tense communication. This goes hand in hand with the last two lessons and changing a few words around can make a future or present tense sentence into a past tense sentence.
To begin, here are a couple of sentences that are common to say:
Today's lesson is going to target past tense communication. This goes hand in hand with the last two lessons and changing a few words around can make a future or present tense sentence into a past tense sentence.
To begin, here are a couple of sentences that are common to say:
LBPNP 00001412013
"I went to the airport yesterday."
"I met Bob last week."
"I was an hour late for my meeting."
"I went to the bus stop, but I was 30 seconds late. A person on the street told me the bus just went by."
"I completed that task this morning."
Speaking in the past requires past tense words. Let's take a closer examination for the sentences above.
"I went to the airport yesterday."
"I met Bob last week."
"I was an hour late for my meeting."
"I went to the bus stop, but I was 30 seconds late. A person on the street told me the bus just went by."
"I completed that task this morning."
Speaking in the past requires past tense words. Let's take a closer examination for the sentences above.
Past Tense
|
Present Tense
|
Future Tense
|
Went
|
Go
|
Going to go
|
Met
|
Meet
|
Will meet
|
Was
|
Am
|
Going to be
|
Completed
|
Complete
|
Will complete
|
As you can see by some of the examples in the chart, some words change when speaking in the past tense.
Besides some words that change, many times a word with the letter 'd' or 'ed' at the end changes the word to past tense. Here are some examples:
"I was being polite so I opened the door for him."
"I stapled the papers together to keep them organized."
"The paper ripped on the bottom, so I taped them together."
"I switched the presents around because I found out Jane doesn't like red lipstick."
"I was very interested in the topic so I paid close attention."
The tricky part is to know when to add a 'd' to the end of a word to make it past tense. There are exceptions that can cause confusion, for example,
"I rode my bike to school." It would be incorrect to say, 'I rided...'
"I built the house from scratch." Incorrect way is to say, 'I builded...'
"I sat on the chair next to the emergency exit." Incorrect way is to say, 'sitted...'
So remember to use past tense words correctly or the other person might not understand what you are saying.
Yesterday - The Past - Questions
and Answers
When asking
questions about the past, you can ask questions like:
"How did you enjoy the movie?"
"What time did you get home last night?"
"How was your date with Jackie?"
"How was the traffic going to the airport?"
"What have you been up to?"
"What did you do last weekend?"
"How was the party?"
"How come you didn't come to class yesterday?"
"How did your presentation go?"
Here are some ways you can answer these types of questions. Remember to use past tense because these actions already occurred.
"How did you enjoy the movie?"
"It was a long movie, but overall all, the movie was great."
"I really didn't like the movie. It was slow and boring."
"I enjoyed the movie so much that I saw it again."
"What time did you get home last night?"
"I got home at two in the morning."
"I didn't make it home until eleven last night."
"I made it home at midnight."
"How was your date with Jackie?"
"The date went so well. We had dinner at a seafood restaurant. And then we saw a movie together."
"I don't think it went too well. We hardly had anything to talk about. I really thought Jackie was bored to death."
"The date was alright. She called me this morning to go out again, but I haven't responded yet."
"What have you been up to?"
"I just graduated from school. I'm so happy that I'm done."
"I met Jackie yesterday and we spent the evening together in a nice restaurant."
"The only thing I have done in the last three months is computer games."
"What did you do last weekend?"
"Last weekend, I visited my parents."
"I went golfing on Saturday. I shot a great score."
"I stayed home and watched TV all weekend long."
"How come you didn't come to class yesterday?"
"I was very sick yesterday."
"I missed the bus and by the time I got to campus, class was already over."
"I slept in because I didn't hear the alarm ring."
"How did your presentation go?"
"It went ok. A few of the people asked some tough questions, but overall it was good."
"I messed up so bad. I brought the wrong folder from my office so I didn't have any notes."
"It was the best presentation of the day. My boss told me I was organized, focused, and spoke clearly."
"How did you enjoy the movie?"
"What time did you get home last night?"
"How was your date with Jackie?"
"How was the traffic going to the airport?"
"What have you been up to?"
"What did you do last weekend?"
"How was the party?"
"How come you didn't come to class yesterday?"
"How did your presentation go?"
Here are some ways you can answer these types of questions. Remember to use past tense because these actions already occurred.
"How did you enjoy the movie?"
"It was a long movie, but overall all, the movie was great."
"I really didn't like the movie. It was slow and boring."
"I enjoyed the movie so much that I saw it again."
"What time did you get home last night?"
"I got home at two in the morning."
"I didn't make it home until eleven last night."
"I made it home at midnight."
"How was your date with Jackie?"
"The date went so well. We had dinner at a seafood restaurant. And then we saw a movie together."
"I don't think it went too well. We hardly had anything to talk about. I really thought Jackie was bored to death."
"The date was alright. She called me this morning to go out again, but I haven't responded yet."
"What have you been up to?"
"I just graduated from school. I'm so happy that I'm done."
"I met Jackie yesterday and we spent the evening together in a nice restaurant."
"The only thing I have done in the last three months is computer games."
"What did you do last weekend?"
"Last weekend, I visited my parents."
"I went golfing on Saturday. I shot a great score."
"I stayed home and watched TV all weekend long."
"How come you didn't come to class yesterday?"
"I was very sick yesterday."
"I missed the bus and by the time I got to campus, class was already over."
"I slept in because I didn't hear the alarm ring."
"How did your presentation go?"
"It went ok. A few of the people asked some tough questions, but overall it was good."
"I messed up so bad. I brought the wrong folder from my office so I didn't have any notes."
"It was the best presentation of the day. My boss told me I was organized, focused, and spoke clearly."
Yesterday - The Past - Example Conversation
Study some examples and
then we will be at the practice session.
Person A: "Why didn't
you come to my party last night?"
Person B: "I'm
sorry I couldn't make it. I had to go visit my grandmother at the
hospital."
Person A: "Oh, I'm
sorry to hear that. Is she doing ok?"
Person B: "They
just completed a small operation and the doctors said she should recover."
Person A: "Did you
get a chance to go to that new restaurant down the street?"
Person B: "Yeah. I
ordered the special, but the server screwed up my order."
Person A: "That
sucks. So what ended up happening?"
Person B: "They
finally got my steak out, but it was overcooked. It was a terrible
experience."
Person A: "What
did you do last weekend?"
Person B: "I went
on a date with Sammy."
Person A: "Really?
How was it?"
Person B: "I
couldn't ask for a better night. We talked all through out our two hour dinner,
and then we sat by the river and cuddled in the night."
Person A: "Didn't
you finish finals week?"
Person B: "Don't
remind me. I think I failed most of the exams."
Person A: "Why did
you do so terrible?"
Person B: "My mind
just went blank. I think I overloaded my brain. I just couldn't concentrate
during the exams."
Yesterday - The Past - Interactive Practice
1
A: "What did you
do last night?"
B: "I met some
friends and we had some drinks at a bar."
A: "Did you drink a
lot?"
B: "I got so drunk
that I don't remember how I got home."
A: "Why did you
drink so much?"
B: "I was so
depressed. I just wanted to forget about everything."
2
A: "How was the
airplane ride?"
B: "It was a
twelve hour flight. It was so boring. I tried to sleep but it was too
uncomfortable on the plane."
A: "How about the
movies they play on international flights?"
B: "I saw both
movies they played. I was just unlucky?"
A: "Did you take a
book with you?"
B: "I accidentally
packed it with my luggage that I checked in."
3
A: "What did you
do last weekend?"
B: "I went to a
party."
A: "How was the
party?"
B: "It was way too
crowed and the food was gone before I got there."
A: "What time did
you get home?"
B: "It was pretty
boring so I left at ten and got home before eleven."
Weather - Summer and Autumn
Summer:
Depending on the location, summer can be warm and pleasant or unbearably hot and humid. Although you will describe summer in one particular way, you should be aware of how other people describe summer in different parts of the world.
In
"Summer is very hot and dry. It's not so bad when we are in the shade."
"Summer is extremely hot. The sun will burn you if you don't wear sunscreen."
"Because it's not humid, it is easy to get used to."
In
"Summer is the only time of year that it doesn't rain much."
"Summer is like paradise in Seattle."
"If summer wasn't so good here, I would move to a different city."
In
"Summer is both hot and humid here."
"I am always sticky because I sweat so much during the summer."
"Without air conditioning, I don't know how I would survive."
Spring and Fall / Autumn
From my perception, I noticed that spring and autumn are generally pleasant seasons for many areas of the world. I haven't heard enough to say one way or another, so I can only write down what I know.
"My favorite season is autumn."
"The only reason I don't like the fall is due to all the leaves I have to rake up."
"Fall is so beautiful because of all the different color leaves everywhere."
"It rains a lot around here during the fall."
"It gets cold in late autumn."
"In our country, autumn is just like summer. It's hot and humid."
"My favorite season is spring because of the budding flowers."
"I love the spring because it's not cold nor hot."
"The spring season here causes a lot of people to sneeze due to all the flowers appearing. Many people with allergies hate the spring."
Weather -
Winter
Winter has
many differences between locations. Some places might be extremely cold like Korea , New York , Alaska , Greenland, etc, and some places might be perfect
like Hawaii , Los Angeles , Mexico
and other hot places.
Hot places that enjoy pleasant summer warmth:
"I don't think we have a winter here. During the winter months, it's still 80 degrees. So everyone loves the winter months because it's not too hot."
"Winter time is the best time to visit because the temperature is the best during January."
"I like to go to Hawaii for my winter vacations because it's so cold in my home city."
Hot places that enjoy pleasant summer warmth:
"I don't think we have a winter here. During the winter months, it's still 80 degrees. So everyone loves the winter months because it's not too hot."
"Winter time is the best time to visit because the temperature is the best during January."
"I like to go to Hawaii for my winter vacations because it's so cold in my home city."
Cold places:
"It's freezing out."
"It doesn't snow often, but when it does, it stays around for several weeks because it stays cold."
"For 3 months, this city will be covered with a layer of snow because it will never melt."
"It doesn't get too cold here, but it's always raining and very gloomy."
"The winter here is cold and dry. We hardly get any precipitation."
Weather - Questions and Answers
In this session, we are
primarily going to practice speaking key sentences that will help you carry a
conversation about the weather.
Asking about the
weather:
"Do you know what the weather will be like
tomorrow?"
"Do you know if it's going to rain tomorrow?"
"Did you see the weather forecast?"
"What is the weather like in Korea/Seattle/Los Angeles ?"
"How is the climate in Korea ?"
"Does it rain much in Denver ?"
"How different is the weather between Pusan
and Seoul ?"
"What is your favorite season of the year?"
Answering questions
about the weather:
"The weather is supposed to be sunny and
warm tomorrow."
"It's supposed to rain for the next several days."
"I didn't see the news yesterday so I don't know what the weather
is going to be like."
"Weather in Los Angeles
is usually hot in the summer and mild in the winter. It never really gets that
cold."
"The weather in Pusan is very
similar to Seoul .
The main difference is that Seoul
gets a little more snow in the winter and a little hotter in the summer. This
is primarily because Pusan
is right next to the water."
"My favorite season of the year is Spring. It's not too cold and
the anticipation of a good summer puts me in a good mood."
Statements about the
weather:
"I heard Seattle
is a very gloomy city with so many clouds."
"The weather is beautiful this time of year."
"I hate the rain. It makes me feel depressed."
"Autumn is a great season."
"The summer months are so humid in Korea ."
"I can't stand the cold winter months."
"It's a beautiful day today, isn't it?"
"I wish the weather was like this everyday."
"It's been raining for 5 days straight. I wonder when it will stop
raining."
"I hate the snow. The roads are dangerous to drive in, and when it
melts, the streets are very dirty."
"I love snowboarding so I always look forward to the winter."
"The winter months are tolerable because I don't mind the
cold."
"Korea
has four distinct seasons."
Weather - Long Description
Being able
to speak specific sentences is good, however, it is more important to be able
to say a whole paragraph when talking about topics such as the weather. I'll
have a specific lesson about putting sentences together in a future lesson. But
I'll give one advice now. Basically, make about 10 sentences. After you know
your ten sentences about this question, you can say all of them one after the
other so it is a long answer. The ten sentences should be in a list format.
We will learn how to speak longer in a future lesson, but if you want to give it a try now, here are two examples.
Question: "What is the weather like in Korea?"
We will learn how to speak longer in a future lesson, but if you want to give it a try now, here are two examples.
Question: "What is the weather like in Korea?"
Question: "Which season do you like the most?"
Weather - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hey John, it's
beautiful out today, isn't it?"
B: "Yeah. I wish
it would be like this everyday."
A: "Did you see
the weather forecast?"
B: "Unfortunately,
it's supposed to start raining tomorrow night."
2
A: "Do you know
what the weather is going to be like tomorrow?"
B: "It's supposed
to be the same as today. I don't think the weather will change much for the
next week or so."
A: "That's
great."
B: "Why are you so
happy? Do you have anything planned?"
A: "Yeah, I'm
going to Everland with my family this weekend so I was hoping for good
weather."
3
A: "I can't
believe it is raining so much."
B: "It's not that
bad. Last year we had floods in 4 different areas of the city."
A: "Really? Does
it always rain so much during this time of year?"
B: "This is not as
bad as usual. During the monsoon season, we usually have rain for 3
weeks."
Small Talk
Many people believe
small talk is very boring and not personable. Although that is true, there are
many places where small talk is very important. In the western culture,
strangers talk to other strangers frequently. On the other hand, small talk is
not so common in the eastern culture. Because strangers are friendly to one
another in the western culture, small talk is very important to master in
regards to learning English. One other place small talk is important is in an
interview. That is why this session will be important to learn.
Small talk involves
many different topics. We will have several sessions on small talk once we have
covered other subjects such as sports, jobs, school, etc. But for now, we will
go through the basics of small talk conversation. To initiate small talk, we
can use what we have learned from our previous several sessions:
One: "Hi Bill, how are you doing?"
Two: "I'm doing great. How are you doing?"
One: "I'm doing well myself."
Wasn't that simple? If
you studied the material in prior sessions, this should be real easy for you.
Now that we have initiated the small talk, it's your responsibility to keep the
conversation going. In order to do so, you can talk about anything that is not
too personal. Let's first ask what the other person has been doing lately.
One: "What have you been up to lately?"
Two: "Well, I just started to work at the bank so I'm pretty busy
learning everything."
You can elaborate on
what you have learned to keep the conversation alive. In this example, you are
going to ask more questions about school and work.
One: "Does that mean you already finished school? I thought you had
1 more semester left."
Two: "I took summer courses, so I finished one semester early."
One: "It's great that you got a job. I'm really happy for
you."
Two: "Thanks."
As you can now tell,
the conversation is getting old. You have a choice of ending the conversation,
or changing the topic. Let's practice ending the conversation.
One: "We should get together for lunch sometime."
Two: "Yeah, that would be great."
One: "I'll call you sometime."
Two: "Ok. I'll see you later."
One: "Alright. See ya."
Small Talk - Two Example Dialogs
In this
conversation, we initiated the conversation and talked about the other person.
However, sometimes you will not have anything to talk about. In order to keep
the conversation alive, you should think about topics such as the weather.
One: "Hi Mary."
Two: "Oh, hi."
One: "How are you doing?"
Two: "I'm doing alright. How about you?"
One: "Not too bad. The weather is great isn't it?"
Two: "Yes. It's absolutely beautiful today."
One: "I wish it was like this more frequently."
Two: "Me too."
One: "So where are you going now?"
Two: "I'm going to meet a friend of mine at the department store."
One: "Going to do a little shopping?"
Two: "Yeah, I have to buy some presents for my parents."
One: "What's the occasion?"
Two: "It's their anniversary."
One: "That's great. Well, you better get going. You don't want to be late."
Two: "I'll see you next time."
One: "Sure. Bye."
This example is when you run into someone. This is an easy type of small talk because when you run out of things to say, you can always say bye. There are times when you don't have that option. Let's practice a situation where you cannot leave, such as an interview. I go into depth about interview communication in a different section. For now, I am going to emphasize the small talk portion of an interview. There are times when you will not have an opportunity for small talk, but in other cases, you might have to talk about general things.
Them: "Hi. My name is Josh. It's a pleasure to meet you."
You: "Hi Josh. I'm glad to be here."
Them: "Did you have any problems finding this place."
You: "I didn't have any problems. I found directions on the internet so it was pretty easy to find. However, the traffic was not that great."
Them: "Traffic is never good around here."
You: "I agree. It would be great if there was a train or a subway line that went through here."
Them: "That would be so great. I would definitely take the train if they had it."
You: "Trains are great because you can read a book or get a little rest instead of having to fight the traffic."
Them: "Very true. Well, let me begin by telling you about our company..."
One: "Hi Mary."
Two: "Oh, hi."
One: "How are you doing?"
Two: "I'm doing alright. How about you?"
One: "Not too bad. The weather is great isn't it?"
Two: "Yes. It's absolutely beautiful today."
One: "I wish it was like this more frequently."
Two: "Me too."
One: "So where are you going now?"
Two: "I'm going to meet a friend of mine at the department store."
One: "Going to do a little shopping?"
Two: "Yeah, I have to buy some presents for my parents."
One: "What's the occasion?"
Two: "It's their anniversary."
One: "That's great. Well, you better get going. You don't want to be late."
Two: "I'll see you next time."
One: "Sure. Bye."
This example is when you run into someone. This is an easy type of small talk because when you run out of things to say, you can always say bye. There are times when you don't have that option. Let's practice a situation where you cannot leave, such as an interview. I go into depth about interview communication in a different section. For now, I am going to emphasize the small talk portion of an interview. There are times when you will not have an opportunity for small talk, but in other cases, you might have to talk about general things.
Them: "Hi. My name is Josh. It's a pleasure to meet you."
You: "Hi Josh. I'm glad to be here."
Them: "Did you have any problems finding this place."
You: "I didn't have any problems. I found directions on the internet so it was pretty easy to find. However, the traffic was not that great."
Them: "Traffic is never good around here."
You: "I agree. It would be great if there was a train or a subway line that went through here."
Them: "That would be so great. I would definitely take the train if they had it."
You: "Trains are great because you can read a book or get a little rest instead of having to fight the traffic."
Them: "Very true. Well, let me begin by telling you about our company..."
Small Talk - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hey Paul. What
are you doing here?"
B: "How's it
going? I'm meeting up with a friend here."
A: "How have you
been man?"
B: "Not too bad.
I'm still in school and having a little fun."
A: "How are you
enjoying Mr. Lee's history class?"
B: "It's so
boring."
A: "Tell me about
it. If it wasn't a requirement, I wouldn't have taken it."
B: "How about you?
What have you been up to?"
A: "I finished
school last spring. I'm searching for a job now, but I'm slacking off."
B: "I heard the
job market is not that hot right now."
A: "I could always
take a low end job, but I'm not that desperate yet."
B: "Well, good
luck to you."
A: "Thanks. It was
good seeing you again."
B: "Yeah. I'll
catch you later."
A: "Have a good
night."
2
A: "You're John
right?"
B: "Yes. Oh,
you're in my English class right?"
A: "Yeah. I'm
Martha."
B: "Well it's good
to finally meet you."
A: "How are you
enjoying the class?"
B: "I'm not sure.
Some days it seems ok, but other days I am totally bored in class."
A: "I know what
you mean. Do you know what is wrong with the weather these days? I haven't seen
the sun in 2 weeks."
B: "The weather
has been pretty terrible recently."
A: "I'm really
hoping the weather gets better."
B: "Do you have
something coming up?"
A: "To tell you
the truth, it's just depressing seeing so much rain."
B: "I don't blame
you. It has been pretty gloomy for sometime now."
A: "This is my
stop. I'll see you later."
B: "I'll see you
in class. Bye."
Movies - Asking Friend
In this
section we will work on the planning aspect of watching a movie. In other Movie
sections, we will cover discussing a movie, types of movies, etc.
Since this is the first Movie section, let me take a quick minute to explain how to find out movie times and how to pay for tickets inAmerica . It's
very similar and simple.
First, you need to find out what time a show is playing. In most cases, this is done by checking the internet. Usually, you type in the zip code and all the theatres in that area will display all the movies and movie times for that week. After you have chosen the movie to see, you need to buy the ticket. There are some places you can buy on-line, but it isn't that popular yet. You can go to the theatre before the movie starts and buy it at the theatre. The only thing you need to know how to say is the movie name and the movie time. Here is a quick example. Let's say you are watching the Titanic at 3:00. You walk up to the counter and say, 'Titanic. Three o'clock.' Wasn't that easy? Finally, big block buster movies usually sell out of tickets very quickly. So if you want to see it on opening day, it is wise to go to the theatre right when it opens and buy the tickets in advance.
Before you watch a movie, you need to plan ahead with friends. Either you are asking a friend to watch a movie, or you are answering. In either case, we will cover it here.
The following questions and statements are used when asking a friend to watch a movie.
"Hey John, do you want to (wanna) go see a movie tonight?"
"I'm going to watch Terminator 2. Do you wanna join?"
"Let's go see The Matrix tomorrow."
"What time should we meet at the theatre?"
"Let's watch a movie after dinner."
"The Titanic is coming out this Friday. Let's go see it."
If there are not enough details, a response can be in a question form. Here are a couple of examples.
"Who is all going?"
"Who are you watching it with?"
"Where are you watching it?"
"What time are you watching the movie?"
Normal answers:
"That sounds great."
"I always wanted to see that. Let's go."
"Let's meet at the theatre at four o'clock."
"Sure. Do you wanna eat lunch together before the movie?"
"I've already seen that movie. What else is playing?"
"I can't. I have to work that night."
"That movie sounds scary. I don't like horror movies."
"I really don't like the actors. I'm going to pass."
Since this is the first Movie section, let me take a quick minute to explain how to find out movie times and how to pay for tickets in
First, you need to find out what time a show is playing. In most cases, this is done by checking the internet. Usually, you type in the zip code and all the theatres in that area will display all the movies and movie times for that week. After you have chosen the movie to see, you need to buy the ticket. There are some places you can buy on-line, but it isn't that popular yet. You can go to the theatre before the movie starts and buy it at the theatre. The only thing you need to know how to say is the movie name and the movie time. Here is a quick example. Let's say you are watching the Titanic at 3:00. You walk up to the counter and say, 'Titanic. Three o'clock.' Wasn't that easy? Finally, big block buster movies usually sell out of tickets very quickly. So if you want to see it on opening day, it is wise to go to the theatre right when it opens and buy the tickets in advance.
Before you watch a movie, you need to plan ahead with friends. Either you are asking a friend to watch a movie, or you are answering. In either case, we will cover it here.
The following questions and statements are used when asking a friend to watch a movie.
"Hey John, do you want to (wanna) go see a movie tonight?"
"I'm going to watch Terminator 2. Do you wanna join?"
"Let's go see The Matrix tomorrow."
"What time should we meet at the theatre?"
"Let's watch a movie after dinner."
"The Titanic is coming out this Friday. Let's go see it."
If there are not enough details, a response can be in a question form. Here are a couple of examples.
"Who is all going?"
"Who are you watching it with?"
"Where are you watching it?"
"What time are you watching the movie?"
"That sounds great."
"I always wanted to see that. Let's go."
"Let's meet at the theatre at four o'clock."
"Sure. Do you wanna eat lunch together before the movie?"
"I've already seen that movie. What else is playing?"
"I can't. I have to work that night."
"That movie sounds scary. I don't like horror movies."
"I really don't like the actors. I'm going to pass."
Movies - Example Conversation
Let's look at a couple
of example conversations before going to the practice section.
Person A: "Hey
John, I'm going to see The Matrix with Peter and Brad. Do you wanna come?"
Person B: "When
are you guys going?"
Person A: "We're
going to see the eight O'clock showing."
Person B: "That
would be perfect. Where are you guys meeting?"
Person A: "We're
meeting at the theatre at seven thirty."
Person B: "Great.
I'll meet you guys there."
Person A: "Hey
Jill."
Person B: "What's
up Mike?"
Person A: "I was
wondering if you have any plans for tomorrow night."
Person B: "Umm...
I don't think I have anything special for tomorrow. Why?"
Person A: "Do you
want to see The Titanic with me?"
Person B: "I
wanted to see that. Yeah. Let's go."
Person A: "What
time is good for you?"
Person B: "How
about seven thirty."
Person A: "Sure.
I'll meet you at the theatre at seven.
Movies - Interactive Practice
1
A: "I hear Batman
is supposed to be good. Do you want to go see it tomorrow?"
B: "I have to eat
dinner with my family tomorrow."
A: "We can watch
the late show. I think it starts at nine forty five."
B: "That would be
great."
A: "What time can
you be at the theatre by?"
B: "I can be there
by 9:15."
A: "Ok. I'll meet
you there."
2
A: "What are you
doing tomorrow?"
B: "Nothing
really."
A: "Let's watch a
movie or something."
B: "What's on
these days?"
A: "I think
they're playing Lord of the Rings"
B: "That sounds
pretty good. Let's watch that."
A: "Where should
we meet?"
B: "How about at
the subway entrance."
A: "Aright. I'll
meet you there at one o'clock."
3
A: "Hey Steve,
what are you doing these days?"
B: "Just working.
The same as usual."
A: "Have you seen
Shiri?"
B: "No. I haven't
seen that yet."
A: "Let's go watch
it tomorrow. It's a weekend and you should take a break."
B: "Well, to think
of it, that sounds great."
A: "I'll give you
a call tomorrow about noon and let you know the time."
B: "Ok. I'll see
you tomorrow."
A: "See you."
4
A: "What should we
do this Saturday?"
B: "Rocky six is
suppose to come out this Friday."
A: "Yeah, but I
don't know if it is going to be any good."
B: "The only
reason I want to see it is because I have seen the previous five."
A: "True. Ok.
Let's see it this Saturday."
B: "How about we
hook up for lunch at 12:00, and then go see the movie afterwards."
A: "Sounds like a
plan. Let's meet in front of Tower Records at 12:00."
Movies Types - Action and Drama
In the next
three movie sections, we are going to learn about different movie types.
Afterwards, we will cover having discussions about movies that you recently
saw. But for now, let's work on movie types.
There are many different types of movies. You probably know them all in your language, but let's learn what they are in English. Also, we will learn how to say a couple of sentences related to a movie type. If you disagree with a sentence, feel free to change some words around so they fit what you want to say.
Although there are many categories, we will learn the most basic 10 types of movies.
Action
Drama
Comedy
Romantic comedy
Horror
Science fiction
Suspense (Thriller)
Western
Commentary / Non-Fiction
There are many different types of movies. You probably know them all in your language, but let's learn what they are in English. Also, we will learn how to say a couple of sentences related to a movie type. If you disagree with a sentence, feel free to change some words around so they fit what you want to say.
Although there are many categories, we will learn the most basic 10 types of movies.
Action
Drama
Comedy
Romantic comedy
Horror
Science fiction
Suspense (Thriller)
Western
Commentary / Non-Fiction
Action: Movies with lots of fighting, shooting, exploding, etc.
"What type of movie do you like?"
"I like action movies because they are fast paced."
"Action movies are my favorite."
"I like all the action movies with a lot of guns."
"I like fight scenes that are choreographed."
Drama: Everyone knows drama. Like Titanic and Schindler's List
"What type of movies do you like?"
"I like all sorts of drama."
"I like movies that play with my emotion."
"Drama movies are great because they are the most realistic."
"The sad drama movies that make me cry."
Movie Types - Comedy and Horror
Comedy: Funny movies with many jokes or actors acting in a funny way.
"I love all types of comedy because I love to laugh."
"Comedy is my favorite because it is very entertaining to me."
"I like comedy that makes fun of political things."
"Comedy is so hilarious that I always enjoy watching them."
Romantic Comedy: Funny movies with a strong romantic theme. Opposite to action because usually guys like action and the ladies like Romantic comedies.
"Many people view romantic comedy movies as chick-flicks."
Chick = girl
Flick = movie
Chick-Flick = a girly type of movie; a movie a girl will like; 'take your girlfriend to' type of movie... or something like that.
"Romantic comedy is funny movies that involve a lot of romance."
"I love all the story lines of romantic comedy movies."
Horror: Scary movies that will give you nightmares for 3 months.
"When I was a little kid, I couldn't sleep because of horror movies."
"Horror movies are not scary anymore."
"I have yet to see a movie that really scares me."
"I hate horror movies because I cannot sleep."
"I always have nightmares after watching horror movies so I try to avoid them."
"I love all types of comedy because I love to laugh."
"Comedy is my favorite because it is very entertaining to me."
"I like comedy that makes fun of political things."
"Comedy is so hilarious that I always enjoy watching them."
Romantic Comedy: Funny movies with a strong romantic theme. Opposite to action because usually guys like action and the ladies like Romantic comedies.
"Many people view romantic comedy movies as chick-flicks."
Chick = girl
Flick = movie
Chick-Flick = a girly type of movie; a movie a girl will like; 'take your girlfriend to' type of movie... or something like that.
"Romantic comedy is funny movies that involve a lot of romance."
"I love all the story lines of romantic comedy movies."
Horror: Scary movies that will give you nightmares for 3 months.
"When I was a little kid, I couldn't sleep because of horror movies."
"Horror movies are not scary anymore."
"I have yet to see a movie that really scares me."
"I hate horror movies because I cannot sleep."
"I always have nightmares after watching horror movies so I try to avoid them."
Movie Types - Other Types
Science Fiction:
Futuristic movies like star wars, star trek, theme of time travel, superhuman
powers, etc.
"Many science fiction movies are about the future."
"The success of a science fiction movie is usually dependent on how
much they spend on special effects."
"After watching a science fiction movie such as star wars, I always
wish I lived in the future."
"Gene Rodenberry and George Lucas are two great people in the
Science Fiction world."
Suspense (Thriller): A
movie that intentionally keeps you in a heightened state.
"I am always on the edge of my seat when I watch suspenseful
movies."
"I can't stand to watch suspenseful movies because my stomach
always gets upset."
"The suspense just kills me."
"It's so exciting to watch a suspense movie."
Western: Old time
cowboy movies
"Western movies are not so popular anymore."
"Client Eastwood was a popular western actor."
"Western movies show a little bit about the United States
during the early years."
"After watching The Last Samurai, I always hoped an Asian country
will make a movie called The Last Cowboy."
Commentary /
Non-Fiction: Educational and true.
"Commentaries and non-fiction films are usually educational."
"Non-profit organizations usually create commentaries supported by
the government."
"Popular non-fiction films are about chimpanzees and gorillas"
"Sometimes non-fiction films are sad because of the hidden truth
that is revealed."
Movie Types - Interactive Practice
1
A: "What type of
movies do you like?"
B: "I like
comedies. How about you?"
A: "I like action."
B: "Action is fun
too."
2
A: "What type of
movies do you like?"
B: "I like all
sorts of movies, primarily drama and science fiction."
A: "That's an
interesting combination. How about western movies?"
B: "Western and
horror are the two types of movies I don't care for."
A: "Why don't you
like horror? They're entertaining."
B: "Some are
entertaining, but I find most of them stupid and childish. For example, I don't
understand why a person always goes into the house alone when something is
suspicious."
A: "Ha ha. I know
what you mean. But it's just a movie. They need for the characters to do
that."
3
A: "Hey, you wanna
see a movie tomorrow?"
B: "Sounds like a
good plan. What do you want to see?"
A: "How about
Legally Blonde."
B: "Ah, my
girlfriend wanted to see that movie. I have to take her later so I don't want
to watch it ahead of time. How about The Cube?"
A: "Isn't that a
scary movie?"
B: "How scary can
it be? Come on, it'll be fun."
A: "Ok. I'll give
it a try."
B: "That's the
spirit. I'll see you tomorrow after class."
A: "Ok. See you
tomorrow
Movie Discussion - General Statements
In this movie section,
we are going to have discussions about movies that we already saw. This is
useful because whenever we come out of a movie theatre, we always ask our
friends what we thought about the movie. Sometimes, it's a simple answer such
as, 'It was alright.' But sometimes, a good discussion can arise from a great
movie. Let's get started...
Every time I finish
watching a movie, I either ask someone, or someone asks me, "What did you
think about the movie?" For the most part, the answer is a simple one line
sentence:
"It was alright."
"It could have been better."
"It was pretty good."
"I liked it."
"It was entertaining."
"It was so stupid I almost fell asleep."
"Lame"
"Boring"
"Too unrealistic"
I can go on for a long
time describing movies. I have listed a few so you get an idea how to answer
simple movie questions.
Besides simple one line
answers, there are a few reasons we need to say other things. It is because
either we didn't understand something, want to describe a scene we liked, want
to describe a scene that was stupid, or simply go on and on about how great the
movie was.
Movie Discussion - Describing a
Movie
Didn't
understand:
"Do you remember the scene when Mary walked into the dining room? Why was she carrying a knife? She didn't use it and the cameras focused on it."
"I can't understand why she betrayed him. The whole movie concentrated on her trust and loyalty. It just doesn't make sense."
"Do you remember the scene when Mary walked into the dining room? Why was she carrying a knife? She didn't use it and the cameras focused on it."
"I can't understand why she betrayed him. The whole movie concentrated on her trust and loyalty. It just doesn't make sense."
Good Scene:
"I love the scene when Russell Crowe showed his face to the emperor after the first gladiator fight."
"What did you think about the last fight scene between Neo and Agent Smith in the rain?"
"The courtroom scene between Jodie Foster and Richard Gere was absolutely amazing."
Great Movie:
"That was such a cool movie. It was the best movie I've seen in a long time."
"Anytime I see a great movie I tend to look at my watch often. That's because I don't want the movie to end."
"The movie was great. I liked everything about it. I'm definitely going to buy the dvd."
Situational questions:
"What would you have done? Would you have taken the million dollars and give up your wife for a night?"
"Would you choose money and fame, or family and stability?"
Some movies are known to be 'based on a true story.' These types of movies are very interesting because they actually happened. The only reason they are not considered to be a non-fiction movie is because the director or writer will add some scenes that didn't happen, or change some facts around so the movie is more appealing to the masses.
A conversation can start from movies such as Schindler's List. When coming out of a theatre, I heard a couple talk briefly about this.
"What did you think about the movie?"
"I thought it was great. It was very powerful."
"How much of it do you think was true?"
"I learned about Germany and World War II in one of my classes, and this movie showed everything I learned from class."
"Wow. It's amazing that these things have happened in our history."
Movie Discussion - Example Dialog
As of this
writing, the latest movie I saw was The Last Samurai. After the movie, I had a
meal with a couple of people. We had a good discussion due to this movie. It is
difficult to specifically teach what you will need to know about movie
conversations because every movie will require different words and sentences.
The only thing I can do here is to give ideas and couple of examples about
movie conversations. So this is not really going to be a practice section, but
a chance to hear a real conversation from a movie. You can click on each
individual sentence, or you can click on the link provided below to hear a real
life conversation.
Listen to the conversation
A: "Did you like the movie?"
B: "It was better than I thought."
C: "I liked it."
A: "The movie didn't have many cheesy or stupid scenes."
B: "Yeah. I'm glad that they didn't have any love scenes. Sometimes a love scene destroys a good movie."
C: "I thought the scene where the girl was washing her hair and Tom Cruise came to say good bye was stupid. Why did they have that there? It didn't make sense."
B: "I agree. They didn't need that scene."
A: "I don't see the harm in that scene. They didn't do anything or show anything. What's the big deal?"
C: "When you are talking about good movies versus great movies, each and every scene counts."
A: "That's true."
B: "But besides those one or two scenes, the movie was great."
A: "I liked everything about it. I really liked the samurai that was beating up Cruise in the beginning of the movie. The guy second in command. He was cool too."
B: "Every movie has a guy like him. They try to make him awesome even though they don't say much."
C: "I don't understand why Tom Cruise went back to that village. If he was the only survivor, wouldn't that make everyone suspicious about where his loyalty lies?"
A: "It was clear in the movie that he loved the place and the samurais. Clearly everyone knows that he isn't a traitor. I would have done the same thing in his position."
B: "I think so too."
C: "But isn't it suspicious that he is the only survivor."
A: "Well, all the samurais were looking for a death in battle. Cruise wasn't."
C: "But only the boss received the satisfaction of being killed with the sword. Nobody else did."
A: "True."
B: "What are we going to order?"
C: "I am going to have a chicken burger because of the Mad Cow disease."
A: "Me too."
B: "I'm just having a soup and salad."
Listen to the conversation
A: "Did you like the movie?"
B: "It was better than I thought."
C: "I liked it."
A: "The movie didn't have many cheesy or stupid scenes."
B: "Yeah. I'm glad that they didn't have any love scenes. Sometimes a love scene destroys a good movie."
C: "I thought the scene where the girl was washing her hair and Tom Cruise came to say good bye was stupid. Why did they have that there? It didn't make sense."
B: "I agree. They didn't need that scene."
A: "I don't see the harm in that scene. They didn't do anything or show anything. What's the big deal?"
C: "When you are talking about good movies versus great movies, each and every scene counts."
A: "That's true."
B: "But besides those one or two scenes, the movie was great."
A: "I liked everything about it. I really liked the samurai that was beating up Cruise in the beginning of the movie. The guy second in command. He was cool too."
B: "Every movie has a guy like him. They try to make him awesome even though they don't say much."
C: "I don't understand why Tom Cruise went back to that village. If he was the only survivor, wouldn't that make everyone suspicious about where his loyalty lies?"
A: "It was clear in the movie that he loved the place and the samurais. Clearly everyone knows that he isn't a traitor. I would have done the same thing in his position."
B: "I think so too."
C: "But isn't it suspicious that he is the only survivor."
A: "Well, all the samurais were looking for a death in battle. Cruise wasn't."
C: "But only the boss received the satisfaction of being killed with the sword. Nobody else did."
A: "True."
B: "What are we going to order?"
C: "I am going to have a chicken burger because of the Mad Cow disease."
A: "Me too."
B: "I'm just having a soup and salad."
Favorite - What's your Favorite
The word favorite is
used a lot in spoken English. It is very common to talk about your favorite
things with your friends or acquaintances. Topics can range from favorite
movies, favorite TV shows, favorite food, favorite cars, etc. Since there are
so many favorite things in the world, you should pay close attention to this
lesson.
Asking questions is the
most common way to use the word favorite:
"Who is your favorite singer?"
"Who is your favorite person?"
"Who is your favorite athlete?"
"Who was your favorite ex-girlfriend?"
"Who was your favorite elementary teacher?"
Are you following me?
It's very easy. Just change the word at the end and you can make dozens of
sentences.
"What is your favorite show?"
"What is your favorite movie?"
"What is your favorite dessert?"
"What is your favorite program?"
"What is your favorite class?"
"What is your favorite game?"
"What was the title of your favorite song?"
"What was the name of your favorite sit-com?"
We used 'who' and
'what' in our sentences. It's possible to use 'where', 'how', and 'when', but
the most common is 'what' and 'who'.
I'll provide a couple
of sentences for the other words.
"Where is your favorite vacation spot?"
"When is your favorite time of day?"
"How is your favorite noodles cooked?"
It's not common,
because even though it is grammatically incorrect, you can ask the same
question with 'what'
"What is your favorite vacation spot?"
"What is your favorite time of day?"
Nobody is really going to
notice and it's not a big deal. After this lesson is over, I suggest practicing
with 'what' and 'who', but don't bother with the others. It's not as
important.
Favorite - Answering Questions
To answer these types
of questions, it is very easy. All you have to do is change 'your' to 'my',
repeat the last portion of the question and add your answer. We'll practice a
couple of times.
"What is your favorite show?"
"My favorite show is Smurfs."
"What is your favorite movie?"
"My favorite movie is Matrix."
"What is your favorite dessert?"
"My favorite dessert is cheesecake."
"Who is your favorite singer?"
"My favorite singer is Josh Groban."
"Who is your favorite athlete?"
"My favorite athlete is Tiger Woods."
"Who was your favorite elementary teacher?"
"My favorite elementary teacher was Mrs. Smouse."
Different ways to ask
about favorite things
You don't necessarily
have to use the word favorite. Favorite basically means what you like the most.
So, you can ask favorite questions without the word favorite.
"What do you like to eat the most?"
"My favorite food is ice cream."
"What is a childhood memory that stands out?"
"My favorite childhood memory is a time I went fishing with my
dad."
"Which professor do you like the most?"
"My favorite professor is Professor Kim."
Likewise, you can
answer questions without using the word favorite.
"What is your favorite baseball team?"
"I like Seattle
Mariners the most."
"What is your favorite type of food?"
"I love Italian food... especially pasta. They are so good."
Favorite - Interactive Practice
1
A: "What are you
doing tomorrow?"
B: "I'm going to
stay home and watch the video."
A: "What are you
going to watch?"
B: "I rented Last
of the Mohican. Have you seen it?"
A: "That was one
of my favorite movies. You will not be disappointed."
2
A: "What's your
favorite food?"
B: "I like Chinese
food the most."
A: "Have you been
to the Chinese restaurant on 44th
street ."
B: "No I haven't.
Is it any good?"
A: "It's my
favorite Chinese restaurant. I believe you will like it."
B: "That sounds
great. Let's go."
3
A: "Hey Jack. How
were your classes this semester?"
B: "They were not
too bad. I really dig/liked my poli-science class."
A: "Would you
consider it your favorite class?"
B: "I don't know
if I would call it my favorite, but it ranks up there."
A: "What class was
your favorite then?"
B: "I took a
business communication class last year and it was terrific."
A: "I never took
that yet. If that was your favorite, I think I will check it out."
Hobby
- Questions and Answers
Hobbies are
a hot topic anytime. Similar to favorite things, hobbies are favorite things
that you do. This is a small section so let's get started.
Questions you can ask:
"What are your hobbies?"
"What do you do in your spare time?"
"What do you like to do?"
"What do you like to do for fun?"
"If you had extra time, what would you do with it?"
There is not much else you can say. Remember that we can create many different sentences, but we want to use what is most common in spoken English. So we need to stay with the most common words.
Questions you can ask:
"What are your hobbies?"
"What do you do in your spare time?"
"What do you like to do?"
"What do you like to do for fun?"
"If you had extra time, what would you do with it?"
There is not much else you can say. Remember that we can create many different sentences, but we want to use what is most common in spoken English. So we need to stay with the most common words.
Answering questions:
"My hobbies consist of golfing, reading novels, and watching movies."
"I like to play computer games in my free time."
"If I'm not working, then I'm busy chatting with people on the Internet."
"During my spare time, I like to cook."
"I like to read magazines."
"In the summer I play golf, and in the winter, I go skiing."
"I love every type of sports."
Making statements:
"I need to find a hobby. I have nothing to do all day."
"Maybe you wouldn't be so lonely if you had a hobby."
"Hobbies are great because it allows you to do what you enjoy."
"Although I have many hobbies, I wish I had more time to do more."
"I love to go snowboarding. It's exhilarating."
"I would go skiing more often, but it takes such a long time to go up to the mountains."
"I wish golfing wasn't so expensive. I would golf almost everyday if I could afford it."
Hobby - Various
Q&A
"If you had all
the money in the world, what would you do?"
"I would probably find some hobbies and join an organization that works for a good cause."
"You just stay home most of the week. Don't you ever get bored?"
"A lot of my hobbies are things I do by myself such as oil painting, sculpting, and drawing. So actually, I have a lot to do with not enough time."
"I'm so bored. I have nothing to do."
"Maybe you should start thinking about some hobbies."
"Is studying considered a hobby?"
"Studying is usually associated with school and work, so it's not usually considered a hobby. But if it's not for these purposes, then I guess it can be a hobby. That's just my opinion though."
"What do you do in your spare time?"
"I do a lot of writing, so I write every chance I get."
"I would probably find some hobbies and join an organization that works for a good cause."
"You just stay home most of the week. Don't you ever get bored?"
"A lot of my hobbies are things I do by myself such as oil painting, sculpting, and drawing. So actually, I have a lot to do with not enough time."
"I'm so bored. I have nothing to do."
"Maybe you should start thinking about some hobbies."
"Is studying considered a hobby?"
"Studying is usually associated with school and work, so it's not usually considered a hobby. But if it's not for these purposes, then I guess it can be a hobby. That's just my opinion though."
"What do you do in your spare time?"
"I do a lot of writing, so I write every chance I get."
Hobby - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hey Bob.
Whatcha you doing?"
B: "I'm at home painting."
A: "I didn't know
you paint. What type of painting is it?"
B: "I enjoy oil
painting. I learned it in one of my extra classes in college."
A: "That sounds so
interesting. I wish I learned a hobby."
B: "Hobbies are
never too late to learn. They offer a variety of classes at the local community
college. You should look into it."
A: "I think I
will. Thanks for the info."
2
A: "Hey Joanne.
What are you up to?"
B: "I'm just
watching some television."
A: "I'm so bored.
I don't know what I'm going to do today and it is only ten in the
morning."
B: "Me too. Do you
think we are boring people?"
A: "I don't think
we are boring. It's just that we don't have any hobbies."
B: "That's right.
What do you think we should do as a hobby?"
A: "That all
depends on what you like to do. For example, I like to doodle on the notepad,
so I'm thinking about doing some real drawings."
B: "I like to play
the piano for fun."
A: "Yeah. That can
be a good hobby."
B: "Hobbies are
great. I'm going to make a list of all the things I like to do."
A: "That's a great
idea. I'm going to do the same."
Exercise - Questions
There are
various types of exercise. Some people might think walking is exercise, and
some other people will think weight lifting is exercise. In the next couple of
lessons, we will take a closer look at various types of exercise.
Exercising can be done in many different ways. Here is a small list to get us started:
Walking
Jogging
Running
Sports
Aerobics
Rowing (boat)
Commuting to work
Etc.
Here are some questions.
"Do you exercise at all?"
"Do you work out?"
"What type of exercising do you do?"
"Where is a good place to exercise?"
"Why don't you exercise?"
"Where do you usually jog?"
"How long do you take a walk for?"
"How often do you jog?"
"Where do you do aerobics?"
"How long do you usually run for everyday?"
Exercising can be done in many different ways. Here is a small list to get us started:
Walking
Jogging
Running
Sports
Aerobics
Rowing (boat)
Commuting to work
Etc.
Here are some questions.
"Do you exercise at all?"
"Do you work out?"
"What type of exercising do you do?"
"Where is a good place to exercise?"
"Why don't you exercise?"
"Where do you usually jog?"
"How long do you take a walk for?"
"How often do you jog?"
"Where do you do aerobics?"
"How long do you usually run for everyday?"
Exercise - Walking Jogging and
More
Walking:
"Every morning right when I get up, I like to take a thirty minute walk."
"I like to take walks with my dog."
"Golf is a healthy sport because of all the walking it requires."
"I heard from some doctors that walking is the healthiest form of exercise."
"There's a trail by my house that is a perfect 20 minute walk."
"We usually go to a nearby lake and walk around it."
Jogging
"Every night, I go to an elementary school across from my house and jog a few laps around the playground."
"I go jogging in the morning when the air is still fresh."
"Some people find jogging stressful, but I find it as a way to relieve some of my stress."
"It feels so good after jogging for half an hour."
"I usually jog on a treadmill because it's convenient."
Sports: We will have another more comprehensive lesson on sports in a different lesson.
"Every morning right when I get up, I like to take a thirty minute walk."
"I like to take walks with my dog."
"Golf is a healthy sport because of all the walking it requires."
"I heard from some doctors that walking is the healthiest form of exercise."
"There's a trail by my house that is a perfect 20 minute walk."
"We usually go to a nearby lake and walk around it."
Jogging
"Every night, I go to an elementary school across from my house and jog a few laps around the playground."
"I go jogging in the morning when the air is still fresh."
"Some people find jogging stressful, but I find it as a way to relieve some of my stress."
"It feels so good after jogging for half an hour."
"I usually jog on a treadmill because it's convenient."
Sports: We will have another more comprehensive lesson on sports in a different lesson.
"I usually play a lot of basketball"
"I get enough exercise from soccer."
"I like to play sports because it is a good form of exercise and allows me to have fun all at the same time."
"Although bowling is a sport, I don't consider it a form of exercise."
"I play volleyball a couple hours a day."
"I practice baseball with my school team everyday."
"I'm in my high school's track and field team. I'm a long distance runner."
"I don't play soccer because it requires too much running."
"Running constantly is a hard thing to do."
Others
"Aerobics is an excellent form of exercise."
"I use a video at home to do my aerobic sessions."
"I like to do aerobics because it targets specific areas."
"I get my exercise from rowing. I'm on the junior varsity crew team."
"I ride my bicycle to work every day."
"I take the stairs because it gives me a little bit of a work out."
"I go to the local park and ride my rollerblades."
Exercise - US Culture
Having lived in the United States and Korea , I realized one big thing
immediately.
In Korea , I have
to do a lot of walking. When I went to school or to work, I had to leave my
house, walk to the bus stop or the subway which takes about 10-15 minutes, get
off at my destination, and walk the rest of the way, which is another 15 minutes.
Total time walking is about 25 minutes. This translates to 50 minutes a day
round trip, and about 3-4 kilometers everyday. I didn't even know it, but I was
exercising.
In America ,
everyone has a car. While going to work here, I literally walk about 7 minutes
a day. That's a total distance of 300 meters. The reason is because I only have
to walk to my car. I drive to work, and then I walk from the parking lot to my
office. So, I realized I was gaining weight without having changed anything
except the walking I wasn't doing.
I suppose that is why
in America
there is a big hype about exercising and losing weight. If you don't want to,
you don't have to walk anywhere or exercise at all. In Korea , walking
is part of the daily routine. So although you don't need to know this lesson as
much as other lessons, it will still help when talking to foreigners about this
subject. Let's continue with the lesson by doing the practice.
Exercise Gym - Questions and
Answers
Here are
some questions you can ask.
"Where do you work out?"
"What club do you work out at?"
"When do you usually work out?"
"How often do you work out?"
"How many hours do you work out in a day?"
To ask how they work out or what their routine is, you can ask:
"When you bench, how many reps and sets do you do?"
Reps are repetition. In weight lifting terminology, this means how many times they lift in one set.
"Do you do low reps with heavy weights, or many reps with light weight."
"How many sets do you do when you work out your arms?"
If you are the person being asked these questions, here are ways you can answer:
"I work out at 24 Hour Fitness"
"I work out at Bally's"
"I work out at Samsung Health Club"
"I started lifting weights about 2 years ago."
"I have been lifting weights for about 2 years now."
"I just started 9 months ago."
"I usually work out 2 hours a day 4 times a week."
"I work out everyday for an hour."
"I go to the gym 3 times a week."
"I go in every other day."
"I can bench press 220 pounds."
"I squat 400 pounds."
"I curl 90 pounds."
"I'm trying to gain bulk so I'm doing low reps with heavy weights."
"I'm trying to get ripped, so I'm doing a lot of repetitions."
Ripped means to get lines to show up in the muscles. It's called ripped because when you rip a piece of paper, you see a line in the paper where the tear is. So a person is ripped when you can see lines on his body due to muscles.
"Where do you work out?"
"What club do you work out at?"
"When do you usually work out?"
"How often do you work out?"
"How many hours do you work out in a day?"
To ask how they work out or what their routine is, you can ask:
"When you bench, how many reps and sets do you do?"
Reps are repetition. In weight lifting terminology, this means how many times they lift in one set.
"Do you do low reps with heavy weights, or many reps with light weight."
"How many sets do you do when you work out your arms?"
If you are the person being asked these questions, here are ways you can answer:
"I work out at 24 Hour Fitness"
"I work out at Bally's"
"I work out at Samsung Health Club"
"I started lifting weights about 2 years ago."
"I have been lifting weights for about 2 years now."
"I just started 9 months ago."
"I usually work out 2 hours a day 4 times a week."
"I work out everyday for an hour."
"I go to the gym 3 times a week."
"I go in every other day."
"I can bench press 220 pounds."
"I squat 400 pounds."
"I curl 90 pounds."
"I'm trying to gain bulk so I'm doing low reps with heavy weights."
"I'm trying to get ripped, so I'm doing a lot of repetitions."
Ripped means to get lines to show up in the muscles. It's called ripped because when you rip a piece of paper, you see a line in the paper where the tear is. So a person is ripped when you can see lines on his body due to muscles.
General Things Review - Interactive Practice
1
A: "How are you
doing?"
B: "I'm doing
great."
A: "What movies
have you seen lately?"
B: "I saw Forrest
Gump the other day."
A: "What type of
movie is that?"
B: "The movie type
is drama."
A: "I can't
believe you are watching movies. The weather is great. You should be
outside."
B: "I hate the hot
weather. I'd rather stay indoors with the air conditioner."
A: "What else do
you like to do besides watching movies?"
B: "I like to play
computer games, read books, go shopping, and play pool."
A: "Out of those
what is your favorite?"
B: "My favorite is
to play computer games."
A: "What is your
favorite computer game?"
B: "My favorite is
Diablo. It used to be Star Craft, but it is getting a little old."
A: "If you like to
play so much, when do you ever exercise?"
B: "Although I
hate to exercise, I go jogging at least twice a week."
A: "That's pretty
good. By the way, what are you doing next Saturday?"
B: "I am going to
go to the bookstore."
A: "I am having a
party Saturday night at my house. If you have time, you should come."
B: "That sounds
like fun."
A: "Great. I'll
see you on Saturday."
B: "Ok. See you
later."
2
A: "Hello?"
B: "Hi Steve. This
is Mike. What are you doing?"
A: "Oh, hi. I was
just watching TV."
B: "There's
nothing to watch right now."
A: "I know. I was
watching a re-run. I have nothing to do and I was bored."
B: "Me too. Let's
get together and do something."
A: "I'd like to,
but I have to meet my parents in an hour for dinner. How about tomorrow?"
B: "Yeah. Let's
plan something tomorrow."
A: "Did you hear
the weather forecast for tomorrow?"
B: "I think it is
going to be the same as today. Clear and sunny."
A: "That's great.
We can do something outdoors then."
B: "Are there any
special events going on tomorrow?"
A: "Yeah. I think
there's a live outdoor concert by the river tomorrow."
B: "Oh yeah. I
heard about that too. Let's go check it out."
A: "Do you know
what time it starts?"
B: "It starts at
one PM."
A: "Let's meet for
lunch at eleven thirty and afterwards, we can head over there."
B: "Perfect. I'll
see you in front of the apartment at eleven thirty."
3
A: "Steve. Is that
you?"
B: "Yeah. What's
going on?"
A: "Not much. What
a surprise to see you here."
B: "Yeah. It's
been a couple of months since I saw you."
A: "What have you
been up to?"
B: "I just started
working out."
A: "Really? Where
do you work out at?"
B: "I joined the
Samsung Health Club last month."
A: "What do you
mostly do during your workout?"
B: "I concentrate
mostly on my legs, chest, arms and stomach."
A: "I should start
exercising more."
B: "It's hard work
while exercising, but it is a great feeling when I get done."
A: "I have a
running machine at home. I used to use it, but I already got sick of it."
B: "Exercising at
home is hard. The environment is not suited for exercising."
A: "If I want to
exercise, I will need to join a gym."
B: "I have a couple
of guest passes. You want to check out my health club."
A: "That's a good
idea. Let's go over the weekend."
B: "Great. I'll
call you Saturday morning."
A: "Aright. I'll
talk to you later."
B: "Ok. Bye."
4
A: "The weather is
terrible."
B: "Yeah. It's
been raining a lot these days."
A: "I have been
watching a lot of videos at home because of the constant rain."
B: "Have you heard
when it's supposed to get better?"
A: "I saw the
weather report, and it's going to rain for the next eight days."
B: "That sucks so
much. What are we going to do?"
A: "I'm getting
pretty bored. We should do something despite the rain."
B: "I'm with you.
What do you have in mind?"
A: "I haven't been
to the Mall in a long time. Let's go there."
B: "That sounds
good. They have a movie theatre there, so if we get bored, we can watch a
movie."
A: "Great. I'll
stop by your place now."
B: "Ok. Don't
forget to bring your umbrella. The rain can start up again anytime."
Machine Problems
There are
many things to say while in the office. Something can go wrong with the
printer, or you could be wondering why a package didn't arrive. The next
several short lessons will be about Basic Office scenarios.
"Do you know what's wrong with the printer?"
"Who do we call to report a problem with the printer?"
"When is the printer going to be fixed?"
"The printer next to the break room is broken. Where is the other printer?"
"The copy machine is jammed again."
"The copy machine is broken."
"We need to get the copy machine fixed."
"A technician is coming this afternoon to fix the copy machine."
"Where is the paper for the copy machine?"
"We need to order more paper. We're running low."
"Do you know what's wrong with the printer?"
"Who do we call to report a problem with the printer?"
"When is the printer going to be fixed?"
"The printer next to the break room is broken. Where is the other printer?"
"The copy machine is jammed again."
"The copy machine is broken."
"We need to get the copy machine fixed."
"A technician is coming this afternoon to fix the copy machine."
"Where is the paper for the copy machine?"
"We need to order more paper. We're running low."
Mail Room
For larger
size companies, a mail room is provided where each employee has their own box.
Here are some sentences you might need to know.
"Where is the mail room?"
"I don't have a mail box. Who should I contact to get one?"
"Your mail box was pretty full. You should go pick them up."
"I haven't checked my mail in 2 weeks."
"I never receive anything so I don't need to check my mail often."
"What time does the delivery person usually come?"
"What time does the mail usually come?"
Large companies also have multiple buildings. So sending mail to another worker is a common practice. For example, if I need to send some financial documents to the auditor in a building down the street, I will use the Inter Office mail service. Some people might say I.O. to make it short.
"I can send it to you through Inter Office mail."
"I'll send it through Inter Office mail immediately."
"I'll IO it to you."
"I need those documents. Can you IO it to me?"
"Would you like to pick them up or should I send it through Inter Office mail?"
The term inter basically means between when there is more than one. For example, in the word international, nation is a country, and if you have inter in front of it, we have international, which means involving two or more nations.
"Where is the mail room?"
"I don't have a mail box. Who should I contact to get one?"
"Your mail box was pretty full. You should go pick them up."
"I haven't checked my mail in 2 weeks."
"I never receive anything so I don't need to check my mail often."
"What time does the delivery person usually come?"
"What time does the mail usually come?"
Large companies also have multiple buildings. So sending mail to another worker is a common practice. For example, if I need to send some financial documents to the auditor in a building down the street, I will use the Inter Office mail service. Some people might say I.O. to make it short.
"I can send it to you through Inter Office mail."
"I'll send it through Inter Office mail immediately."
"I'll IO it to you."
"I need those documents. Can you IO it to me?"
"Would you like to pick them up or should I send it through Inter Office mail?"
The term inter basically means between when there is more than one. For example, in the word international, nation is a country, and if you have inter in front of it, we have international, which means involving two or more nations.
Requesting Equipment
"I'm out of staples. Do we have any more in the supply room?"
"The supply room is running low on pens. I think we should get
more."
"My monitor is very old. It's a little blurry and it gives me a
headache when I look at it for a long duration. Could I get a new
monitor?"
"My computer is too slow. It slows down my work. I would like a
faster computer. It will increase my efficiency on many of my tasks."
"I would like an ergonomic keyboard. I can type much faster with
those."
"Can I get a new chair? This one is so uncomfortable."
"Can you get me a headset for the telephone? I'm on the phone most
of the day and I would like to free up my hands."
Company Policies
Every company has their
own rules about animals, dress code, break time, vacation time, and many other
policies. Let's take a moment to learn how to ask about these policies.
"How long are we allowed for lunch?"
"How long is our lunch break?"
"If I only take a 30 minute lunch, can I leave 30 minutes
earlier?"
"What time should I report to work?"
"Is there a strict policy on working hours?"
"Are we allowed to start work an hour later if we work an hour
more?"
"What is the dress code here?"
"Are we allowed to wear casual clothes on Friday?"
"Does this company have the casual Friday thing?"
"If I have ten vacation days, am I allowed to use them all at
once?"
"What holidays do we have off?"
"Do our vacation days expire?"
"Does this company allow telecommuting?"
"Are we allowed to work from home?"
I'm Busy
For general
statements about being tired at work or being sick of work will be covered in
the 'Talking to coworkers' section. These types of statements shouldn't be said
to everyone.
"I'm busy with work."
"Can I do this later?"
"Does this have to be done now?"
"When do you need this by?"
"When is the deadline?"
"I'm not going to have time for any other assignment until Thursday."
"I'll try to free up my schedule."
"I'm pretty sure I can meet the deadline."
"If I don't get any help on this, I won't be able to complete it on time."
"I'll do whatever I can do make sure this is done on time."
"You can count on me."
"Have I ever let you down?"
"I'm busy with work."
"Can I do this later?"
"Does this have to be done now?"
"When do you need this by?"
"When is the deadline?"
"I'm not going to have time for any other assignment until Thursday."
"I'll try to free up my schedule."
"I'm pretty sure I can meet the deadline."
"If I don't get any help on this, I won't be able to complete it on time."
"I'll do whatever I can do make sure this is done on time."
"You can count on me."
"Have I ever let you down?"
Giving/Asking Business Cards
"Do you have a
business card?"
"Could I have one of your business cards?"
"Can I have your business card?"
Responding to these questions are very easy. You can just say 'sure' or 'no problem.'
"Can I get your phone number or email address?"
"What is the best way to contact you?"
"Can I get your contact information?"
"Let me give you one of my business cards."
"My contact information is on my business card. Let me give you one."
"You can reach me by calling the number on my business card."
"My email address is on my business card."
"Could I have one of your business cards?"
"Can I have your business card?"
Responding to these questions are very easy. You can just say 'sure' or 'no problem.'
"Can I get your phone number or email address?"
"What is the best way to contact you?"
"Can I get your contact information?"
"Let me give you one of my business cards."
"My contact information is on my business card. Let me give you one."
"You can reach me by calling the number on my business card."
"My email address is on my business card."
General
Office
If you
can't find a file, you can ask around.
"Do you know where the ABC file is at?"
"Do you have the ABC file?"
"Is anybody using the ABC file right now?"
"Did you check the file cabinet? It should be there."
"Check the bin. Sometimes people throw it in there after they are done."
"Oh... it's in my desk. I forgot to put it back."
"It's in my office. I'll get it for you."
If you see a file or a book you need on someone's desk, you can ask to borrow it.
"Are using this book right now?"
"Can I borrow this book?"
"Are you finished with this file?"
"Are you done with this report?"
"Can I use this file?"
If you need something, it is common to ask around. Here are some examples of what you might need in the office.
"Do you have an extra mouse? Mine broke."
"Do you have another network cable? The one I have is too short."
"Do you have a blank floppy disk I can have?"
"I ran out of labels. Do you have any I can have?"
"Can I borrow your stapler?"
"Do you have a hole puncher?"
"Do you have a staple remover by any chance?"
"Do you know where the ABC file is at?"
"Do you have the ABC file?"
"Is anybody using the ABC file right now?"
"Did you check the file cabinet? It should be there."
"Check the bin. Sometimes people throw it in there after they are done."
"Oh... it's in my desk. I forgot to put it back."
"It's in my office. I'll get it for you."
If you see a file or a book you need on someone's desk, you can ask to borrow it.
"Are using this book right now?"
"Can I borrow this book?"
"Are you finished with this file?"
"Are you done with this report?"
"Can I use this file?"
If you need something, it is common to ask around. Here are some examples of what you might need in the office.
"Do you have an extra mouse? Mine broke."
"Do you have another network cable? The one I have is too short."
"Do you have a blank floppy disk I can have?"
"I ran out of labels. Do you have any I can have?"
"Can I borrow your stapler?"
"Do you have a hole puncher?"
"Do you have a staple remover by any chance?"
Office Basics - Interactive Practice
A: "I can't get
the printer to work."
B: "Did you check
to see if it had paper?"
A: "Yeah. That's
the first thing I checked."
B: "I don't know
then. You might have to call the technician."
A: "How do I do
that?"
B: "Just tell the
admin and she should take care of it."
A: "Is there
another printer that I can use?"
B: "Yeah. There's
one down the hall next to the supply room."
A: "Oh yeah... I
remember that one. Thanks."
B: "No
problem."
A: "Do you have a
lot of work?"
B: "Yeah. I'm pretty
busy. Why?"
A: "Oh. I needed
some help on documenting this process."
B: "Does this have
to be done right now?"
A: "The manager
wants it by Friday."
B: "I'll try to
free up my schedule. Remind me again tomorrow morning, and I'll help you in the
afternoon."
A: "Do you need to
read the documents first?"
B: "Yeah. That
would help."
A: "I'll print you
a copy and then drop them off."
B: "Make sure you
drop it off before five because I have to leave early."
A: "No problem.
Thanks."
A: "Are you new
here?"
B: "Yeah. I just
started yesterday."
A: "Welcome
aboard. I'm Jack."
B: "I'm Mark. Nice
to meet you."
A: "What are you
going to be working on?"
B: "I'm going to
work on the planning team. But I haven't started yet. I'm still in
training."
A: "The planning
team is great. Our marketing team works with them closely. We'll end up working
together sometimes."
B: "That's great.
Oh, can I ask you some questions?"
A: "Sure."
B: "Does this
company have a casual Friday?"
A: "Not really.
You can get away with wearing slacks, but I've never seen anyone wear
jeans."
B: "That's
alright. Do you know any good places to eat around here?"
A: "Yeah there's a
deli right across the street. They have fresh sandwiches and sometimes hot
dishes like teriyaki. It's pretty good."
B: "That sounds
good. Thanks for the info."
A: "No problem. If
you need anything, I sit right around the corner here."
A Little Late
When you
work for a company, there are times when you are late or you can't make it to a
meeting. Sometimes you are sick, or sometimes you are stuck in traffic. We will
study sentences you need to know to say why you are late or can't make it to
work.
Late
Some jobs require you to 'punch in' when you get to work. 'Punching in' keeps track of how long you worked. Many hourly jobs use this system. But if you are a salary person and do not have to 'punch in', then you have more flexibility. Let's say you are going to be five minutes late. If you have your own office, then nobody will know. But if you work in a setting where your boss sees you coming in, then you will need an excuse. We'll cover everything about being late here.
Five minutes late
If you are going to be just a little late, then you don't need to call in. However, you will need to tell them why you are late when you get in the office. Here are some examples.
"Sorry I'm late. Traffic was unusually bad today."
"I apologize for being late. I had to drop off my wife at work. It took longer than I thought."
"I had a dentist appointment this morning and it was longer than I expected."
"I'm sorry for being late. I got stuck in every light this morning."
If you are the boss, then you might want to ask why your employee is late. Let's see some of these sentences.
"Running late this morning?"
"What held you up this morning?"
"Do you have a reason for being late?"
"Why are you late?"
A boss or manager will not be too upset if you are late only once or very rarely. But if this is a constant habit, they might be a little more upset.
"You have been late three times in the last two weeks. Is this going to be a continual problem?"
"Your tardiness is getting out of hand. You better start managing your morning time better."
"I expect you to be at your desk at eight o'clock. Do you have a problem with this?"
If you hear one of these statements, then you better say something that will calm the boss down. Also, you shouldn't let this happen again so tell him or her it won't happen again.
"I am terribly sorry. It won't happen again."
"I had a lot of recent changes at home, but it's all taken care of. I will not be late again."
"I'm really sorry. It's been one of those weeks. It won't happen again."
Late
Some jobs require you to 'punch in' when you get to work. 'Punching in' keeps track of how long you worked. Many hourly jobs use this system. But if you are a salary person and do not have to 'punch in', then you have more flexibility. Let's say you are going to be five minutes late. If you have your own office, then nobody will know. But if you work in a setting where your boss sees you coming in, then you will need an excuse. We'll cover everything about being late here.
Five minutes late
If you are going to be just a little late, then you don't need to call in. However, you will need to tell them why you are late when you get in the office. Here are some examples.
"Sorry I'm late. Traffic was unusually bad today."
"I apologize for being late. I had to drop off my wife at work. It took longer than I thought."
"I had a dentist appointment this morning and it was longer than I expected."
"I'm sorry for being late. I got stuck in every light this morning."
If you are the boss, then you might want to ask why your employee is late. Let's see some of these sentences.
"Running late this morning?"
"What held you up this morning?"
"Do you have a reason for being late?"
"Why are you late?"
A boss or manager will not be too upset if you are late only once or very rarely. But if this is a constant habit, they might be a little more upset.
"You have been late three times in the last two weeks. Is this going to be a continual problem?"
"Your tardiness is getting out of hand. You better start managing your morning time better."
"I expect you to be at your desk at eight o'clock. Do you have a problem with this?"
If you hear one of these statements, then you better say something that will calm the boss down. Also, you shouldn't let this happen again so tell him or her it won't happen again.
"I am terribly sorry. It won't happen again."
"I had a lot of recent changes at home, but it's all taken care of. I will not be late again."
"I'm really sorry. It's been one of those weeks. It won't happen again."
Very Late
If you are going to be
a lot later than 5 minutes, then you should call your manager and tell them
about it.
"Hi Barbara, I'm going to be 30 minutes late today. My car is having trouble this morning, so I arranged for a ride with a friend."
"Hey Jack, I'm running a little late today. I just got out of my dentist appointment and it was longer than I expected."
"Mark? This is Pat. I'm stuck in traffic. I think there is an accident that is holding up traffic. I'm going to be a little late."
When you plan on being late ahead of time, it is much easier. For example, if you have a doctor's appointment in the morning, you can tell them in advance and then you don't have to worry about coming in on time.
"I have a doctor's appointment tomorrow morning. Remember I told you earlier this week? I'll come in right after my appointment."
"My daughter has been sick, so I'm going to take her to see the doctor tomorrow morning. Is it ok if I'm a little late? My appointment is at seven in the morning, so I'll only be an hour late."
"I have to take my parents to the airport tomorrow. I shouldn't be too late, but wanted to tell you ahead of time."
"Hi Barbara, I'm going to be 30 minutes late today. My car is having trouble this morning, so I arranged for a ride with a friend."
"Hey Jack, I'm running a little late today. I just got out of my dentist appointment and it was longer than I expected."
"Mark? This is Pat. I'm stuck in traffic. I think there is an accident that is holding up traffic. I'm going to be a little late."
When you plan on being late ahead of time, it is much easier. For example, if you have a doctor's appointment in the morning, you can tell them in advance and then you don't have to worry about coming in on time.
"I have a doctor's appointment tomorrow morning. Remember I told you earlier this week? I'll come in right after my appointment."
"My daughter has been sick, so I'm going to take her to see the doctor tomorrow morning. Is it ok if I'm a little late? My appointment is at seven in the morning, so I'll only be an hour late."
"I have to take my parents to the airport tomorrow. I shouldn't be too late, but wanted to tell you ahead of time."
Leaving Work Early
This is a little easier
than explaining to your boss why you are 10 minutes late. You can think of an
excuse ahead of time, or tell them about an appointment so you can leave early.
You can use the same excuses as the ones I mentioned earlier. You just have to
change the wording a little and make it future tense.
"I have to leave a little early today. Is it ok if I finish my work
at home?"
"I have a dentist appointment at four. I have to leave early
today."
"I have a dentist appointment tomorrow at four. Is it ok if I leave
early tomorrow?"
"I have to pick up my wife at the airport tomorrow. Is it ok if I
leave at three?"
"I have a conference with my son's teacher tomorrow at three
thirty. I have to leave at three. Will that be ok?"
"I have a terrible headache. Is it ok if I leave early today?"
"I think I might be coming down with the flu. I should get some
rest and try to fight this thing off early. May I leave early today?"
"I'm not feeling well. I think I should get some rest. Will it be
ok if I go home early today?"
"My son got sick and I have to pick him up from school. Will that
be ok?"
Sick day
"Martha? This is
Jack. I have a fever and I will not be able to come in today."
"Hi Mary, I have to use a sick day today. I'm feeling terrible right now."
"Hi Steve, this is Mark. I wanted to let you know that I am too sick to come in today."
"Hi Andrew, this is Josh. I'm pretty sick so I will not be able to make it in today. I was feeling sick last night and thought I would be better after some sleep, but it just got worse."
"Hi Sam, this is Jessica. I have some urgent personal matters I have to deal with. I won't be able to make it in."
"Mark? This is John. My dad went into the emergency room this morning. I'm not sure what the problem is, but I don't think I can make it in today. I'll send you an update later."
"My son all of the sudden got really sick. I have to take him to the hospital now. I doubt I can make it in today. Will that be ok?"
"Jake? Will it be ok if I take the day off? My grandmother just passed away and I don't think I will be able to work today."
"Hi Mary, I have to use a sick day today. I'm feeling terrible right now."
"Hi Steve, this is Mark. I wanted to let you know that I am too sick to come in today."
"Hi Andrew, this is Josh. I'm pretty sick so I will not be able to make it in today. I was feeling sick last night and thought I would be better after some sleep, but it just got worse."
"Hi Sam, this is Jessica. I have some urgent personal matters I have to deal with. I won't be able to make it in."
"Mark? This is John. My dad went into the emergency room this morning. I'm not sure what the problem is, but I don't think I can make it in today. I'll send you an update later."
"My son all of the sudden got really sick. I have to take him to the hospital now. I doubt I can make it in today. Will that be ok?"
"Jake? Will it be ok if I take the day off? My grandmother just passed away and I don't think I will be able to work today."
Vacation
Taking a planned day off
These are the easiest to request. If you are caught up with your work and you want to take a vacation or personal day, it is as easy as asking for it.
"Can I use a vacation day this Friday?"
"Will it be ok if I use a personal day this Thursday?"
"I have to catch up on a lot of errands, so can I use a vacation day on Monday?"
"My parents are coming into town. Can I take Thursday and Friday off?"
"I would like to use my vacation days for the first week of June. Will that be ok?"
"Will it be ok if I take the last week of July off?"
"Can I schedule a vacation for the second week of August?"
"I was wondering if I can take a vacation. Can I take the first two weeks off in September?"
Remember that asking for a vacation all depends on the office policies. Some companies do not like an employee taking all their vacation days at once. However, some places are more lenient and allow long vacation days. Before asking for long vacation days, you should first see what other employees are doing.
These are the easiest to request. If you are caught up with your work and you want to take a vacation or personal day, it is as easy as asking for it.
"Can I use a vacation day this Friday?"
"Will it be ok if I use a personal day this Thursday?"
"I have to catch up on a lot of errands, so can I use a vacation day on Monday?"
"My parents are coming into town. Can I take Thursday and Friday off?"
"I would like to use my vacation days for the first week of June. Will that be ok?"
"Will it be ok if I take the last week of July off?"
"Can I schedule a vacation for the second week of August?"
"I was wondering if I can take a vacation. Can I take the first two weeks off in September?"
Remember that asking for a vacation all depends on the office policies. Some companies do not like an employee taking all their vacation days at once. However, some places are more lenient and allow long vacation days. Before asking for long vacation days, you should first see what other employees are doing.
Late for Work - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Jack. Can I
see you in my office?"
B: "Sure."
A: "You have been
late 3 times in the last 2 weeks. Is this going to be a continual
problem?"
B: "I'm so sorry.
I really got unlucky this morning."
A: "Being late
once in a while is based on luck. If you are late frequently, it shows that you
are irresponsible. How are you going to fix it?"
B: "Last week, I
had a lot of personal problems. I took care of all those problems and I don't
have any excuse to be late anymore. I planned on coming in to the office early
today, but there was an accident that held up traffic."
A: "You better
start anticipating all problems because I'm not going to tolerate your
tardiness any longer. Is that clear?"
B: "Perfectly
clear. I will not be late again."
A: "That's
all."
2
A: "Hey Martha, is
there anything urgent that needs to be done today?"
B: "No. I don't
believe so. Why?"
A: "I have a
terrible headache and I was wondering if it would be ok if I could leave a
little early today."
B: "I don't see
why not. You can make up the time later in the week."
A: "That's what I
was thinking too. But as for today, I don't think I can be productive."
B: "It's already
two o'clock now. What time were you going to leave?"
A: "I'm just going
to wrap up and leave pretty soon. Probably in about thirty minutes."
B: "Ok. Get some
rest. If you are sick tomorrow, give me a call."
A: "Aright.
Thanks. I'll see you tomorrow."
3
A: "Hi Martha.
This is Jack. I think I caught a flu or something. I feel worse than
yesterday."
B: "You better
stay home today then."
A: "I think that will
be best. I'll log my sick day tomorrow when I get in."
B: "No problem.
Just get some rest. We have everything covered here so don't worry."
A: "Ok. Just in
case something happens, you can call me at home. I'll be here all day."
B: "Ok. Thanks for
calling. I'll see you when you get better."
A: "Aright.
Thanks. Bye."
Removable Disk
When you save data,
there are several ways to save it. There is the standard removable disk, saving
to the hard drive, and saving to a network share.
"Does anybody have
an extra floppy disk?"
"I ran out of
floppy disks. Where can I get more?"
"I think we need
to order more floppy disks."
"I saved it on a
floppy disk."
"I have all the
information on my USB drive."
"Can you save the
document on a disk and give it to me?"
"Save the
information on a disk and give it to Jack."
"I'll have all the
information on a disk and bring it to the meeting."
Standard floppy disks
only hold 1.44 MB of information. There are times when the disk is not big
enough. Here are ways to express this.
"All the
information doesn't fit on one disk."
"The file is too
large to fit on a disk."
"Do you have a
different storage device that can hold more information?"
"Can you order a
128 MB removable storage device for me? I always need to move files that a
regular floppy disk cannot hold."
Software
Different
companies use different software programs. For example, a tax firm might use a
program for tax purposes, and an insurance company will use their own software
for inputting data to retrieve quotes for customers. You might not have the
software or it might be broken. I'll have some example sentences for these
situations.
"What software do you use here?"
"What kind of application do you use to keep track of all these records?"
"Martha told me about TaxIt. When can I get a copy?"
"Is there a manual how to use this program?"
"How do you use this?"
"TaxIt won't open any more. I think it's broken."
"I can't get TaxIt to work. Can someone help me with this?"
"Microsoft Office applications do everything we need. That's all we use here."
"What version of Office do you use here?"
"What software do you use for word processing?"
"All the documents are saved using MSWord. Do you have Word or another application that will be able to read the information?"
"We use a different word processing application. Can you save as a text file?"
"I can't open the file that you gave me. What version of Word are you using?"
"What software do you use here?"
"What kind of application do you use to keep track of all these records?"
"Martha told me about TaxIt. When can I get a copy?"
"Is there a manual how to use this program?"
"How do you use this?"
"TaxIt won't open any more. I think it's broken."
"I can't get TaxIt to work. Can someone help me with this?"
"Microsoft Office applications do everything we need. That's all we use here."
"What version of Office do you use here?"
"What software do you use for word processing?"
"All the documents are saved using MSWord. Do you have Word or another application that will be able to read the information?"
"We use a different word processing application. Can you save as a text file?"
"I can't open the file that you gave me. What version of Word are you using?"
Internet
I'm not going to
explain all the specifics about the Internet here. The goal of this lesson is
not to give a computer lesson, but to learn English related to using the
computer. I will show some sentences that are commonly used for the Internet.
"What is the URL of that site again?"
"What is the address to the English site you are studying?"
"What is the best search engine?"
"Where can I find information on marriage law?"
"If you go to greatsite.com, you will find all the information I just told you."
"If you need more information on cooking, go to cooking.com."
"I purchased all the computers from Dell.com. We should have them by the end of the week."
"Do you have a company website?"
"Is there a website where I can learn more about your services?"
"Do you have a website where I can review the different products you are offering?"
"I HATE POP-UPS!"
I really do. I hate pop-up ads with a passion. If it was up to me, I would shut down all companies that produce pop up ads. For now, we have to live with them.
"Can I install something that stops pop-up ads?"
"What tools are available to block pop-up ads?"
"I think I misspelled the web address. Can you spell it out for me?"
"I'm getting a page not found error. I think the web site is down."
"What is the URL of that site again?"
"What is the address to the English site you are studying?"
"What is the best search engine?"
"Where can I find information on marriage law?"
"If you go to greatsite.com, you will find all the information I just told you."
"If you need more information on cooking, go to cooking.com."
"I purchased all the computers from Dell.com. We should have them by the end of the week."
"Do you have a company website?"
"Is there a website where I can learn more about your services?"
"Do you have a website where I can review the different products you are offering?"
"I HATE POP-UPS!"
I really do. I hate pop-up ads with a passion. If it was up to me, I would shut down all companies that produce pop up ads. For now, we have to live with them.
"Can I install something that stops pop-up ads?"
"What tools are available to block pop-up ads?"
"I think I misspelled the web address. Can you spell it out for me?"
"I'm getting a page not found error. I think the web site is down."
Intranet
A lot of companies have
an intranet site. This is basically web pages that can be viewed by employees
connected to the network in the office. The address does not use the standard
.net or .com address. It will simply be http://companysite.
"Do we have an intranet site that explains our benefits?"
"What was the site where we log our travel expenses?"
"If you want to use a sick day, you can go to
http://timereport."
If you have an intranet
site for your company, then when you talk to other workers, you don't need to
say http:// every time. You can simply say the name, for example, 'If you want
to use a sick day, you can go to time report.' The other person listening
should understand that you mean http://timereport.
"Is there an intranet site detailing each project our company is
doing?"
"Is our company going to put an intranet site for employees?"
"I think it will help a lot if we had an intranet site with general
questions and answers from all the employees."
General
Computer Sentences
"My computer is
giving me problems again."
"My computer broke, but luckily I saved my work on a disk."
"My computer is too slow."
"Something is wrong with my computer."
"I work with the computer most of the day."
"All my work is done on the computer."
"We are upgrading our computers this week."
"I hope we upgrade our computers soon. The ones we have are way too old."
"My computer froze. What should I do?"
"My computer is not responding and I haven't saved my data yet. What should I do?"
"My computer is making a weird sound. Can I get someone to look at it?"
This concludes the computer English lesson. I know many of the business topics are large and some of them have topics I didn't cover. I want to remind you that you can ask specific questions to us using the business bulletin board.
"My computer broke, but luckily I saved my work on a disk."
"My computer is too slow."
"Something is wrong with my computer."
"I work with the computer most of the day."
"All my work is done on the computer."
"We are upgrading our computers this week."
"I hope we upgrade our computers soon. The ones we have are way too old."
"My computer froze. What should I do?"
"My computer is not responding and I haven't saved my data yet. What should I do?"
"My computer is making a weird sound. Can I get someone to look at it?"
This concludes the computer English lesson. I know many of the business topics are large and some of them have topics I didn't cover. I want to remind you that you can ask specific questions to us using the business bulletin board.
Computer Related - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Barbara, did
you finish the report on XYZ Company?"
B: "Yes. I just
finished today."
A: "I would like
to review them before we send the report. Can you give me a copy?"
B: "Sure. Would
you like a hard copy?"
A: "No. Just send
me the path to the location of the report. I'll look them over on my
computer."
B: "Sure. I'll
give you permission for the folder. You can find them at barbara01 slash XYZ.
I'll give you permission right now."
A: "Great.
Thanks."
2
A: "John, are you
having problems with your network?"
B: "I think our
whole network is down for upgrades. It should be back up in an hour."
A: "That's too
late. I need the review documents from the company network share."
B: "I have a copy
of that on my computer."
A: "Really? Can I
get a copy?"
B: "Sure. But
since the network is down, I'll have to put it on a disk for you."
A: "That would be
great."
B: "Do you have a
floppy disk?"
A: "I think I have
one on my desk. Here it is."
B: "Ok. It's
saving now. Here you go."
A: "Thanks. You
saved me a great deal of trouble. I'm so glad you had a copy of this on your
machine."
B: "No problem.
I'm glad I could help."
3
A: "Don't we need
a tax software to do this work?"
B: "Yeah. Don't
you have it installed on your computer?"
A: "No. They said
they would install it for me, but they didn't do it yet."
B: "Go ask your
manager. He probably forgot."
A: "That's a good
idea. Is there an instructional manual for this software?"
B: "It's in the
second file cabinet under Software Applications."
A: "Thanks. I'll
probably need it when I get the software."
B: "Actually, it's
not that difficult to use. I think you should be able to figure it out without
the manual. The manual is only good for advanced options that we don't really
need."
A: "You're
probably right. Many of the manuals I've read were not that helpful. Do you
mind if I come to you for questions when I am using the software?"
B: "Not at all.
Feel free to ask any questions. If I know the answer, I'll let you know."
A: "Great. I
better go find the manager to get the software installed on my computer."
Asking for Email Address
Email is a daily part
of the office life. Everybody and every company uses email as a way to
communicate quickly. This lesson will cover all aspects of using the email.
"Can I have your email address?"
"What is your email address?"
"Do you have an email account?"
"My email address is someone at hotmail dot com (someone@hotmail.com)."
"It is someone@hotmail.com"
"Do you have his email address?"
"What was her email address again?"
"Can I have your email address?"
"What is your email address?"
"Do you have an email account?"
"My email address is someone at hotmail dot com (someone@hotmail.com)."
"It is someone@hotmail.com"
"Do you have his email address?"
"What was her email address again?"
Requesting information through
email
"Can you send it
to my email address?"
"You can send it to me through email."
"Can you email it to me?"
"Can I email it to you?"
"Can I send you the information through email?"
Whenever you send an email to an account that doesn't exist, you get a automated email saying the mail was not delivered. You can use these sentences if you are in this situation.
"Can I verify your email address? The address I have on file appears to be incorrect."
"I am unable to email it to you. Can you tell me your email address again?"
"You can send it to me through email."
"Can you email it to me?"
"Can I email it to you?"
"Can I send you the information through email?"
Whenever you send an email to an account that doesn't exist, you get a automated email saying the mail was not delivered. You can use these sentences if you are in this situation.
"Can I verify your email address? The address I have on file appears to be incorrect."
"I am unable to email it to you. Can you tell me your email address again?"
"I am getting a mail saying it is undeliverable. I might have misspelled it. Can I double check your email address?"
"The email address I sent it to was someone@hotmail.com. Is this correct?"
"I sent the email to someone@hotmail.com. Didn't you get it?"
"That's the wrong email address. My email address is someone@hotmail.net."
Sending attachments through email
Some companies have
security in place such as firewalls that prevents sending certain types of
attachments. For example, sending a .js file is potentially dangerous because
it can run scripts. Also, some documents can carry viruses through macros or
other methods. Sending attachments to some email addresses are not possible.
However, text files are usually permitted. Here are some sentences that you
might find useful.
"I can send you the document through email."
"I'll send you the images to your email account."
"Can I send the documents to your email?"
"Can I email you the files?"
"Can I email the files to you?"
"I received your email, but I didn't receive the attachments."
"My company prevents many types of attachments. Can you send a text
file instead?"
"Before you send the document, change the extension .doc to .txt
and then send it. When I receive it, I will change it back to .doc before I
open it."
"Hi Mary, I sent you an email with my proposal as an attachment.
Did you receive it?"
"Hey Jack, did you receive my attachments?"
"The file is too large to send through email."
"My email account will only allow sending attachments that are 1 MB
or smaller."
"My email account will only allow me to receive attachments that
are 2 MB or smaller."
Email Problems
"My email is
getting full. I better delete some old mail."
"I better save my emails to my hard drive so I can make some room in my inbox."
"How do I request more storage space for my email account? I am constantly running out of space."
"You're running out of email space too? I have the same problem at least once a month."
"I hate getting the mail that I am running low on space."
"I just started my job so I haven't received my email address yet."
"My email account hasn't been created yet. They said I should receive it tomorrow."
"I haven't received my emails in the last four hours. I think the server is down or something."
"I think the exchange server is down. Is somebody taking a look at this problem?"
"I can't send anything right now. Is anybody else having a problem with their email?"
"It could be a network problem, but my email account is not working."
"I can't access my email right now. I think the server is down."
"Who should we contact if we are having email problems?"
"I keep getting junk mail in my work account. How did they get this email address?"
"How do I prevent junk mail?"
"Don't open any mail with the title, 'Your request has been approved!!!' It contains a virus. Please delete this mail at once if you see it."
"I better save my emails to my hard drive so I can make some room in my inbox."
"How do I request more storage space for my email account? I am constantly running out of space."
"You're running out of email space too? I have the same problem at least once a month."
"I hate getting the mail that I am running low on space."
"I just started my job so I haven't received my email address yet."
"My email account hasn't been created yet. They said I should receive it tomorrow."
"I haven't received my emails in the last four hours. I think the server is down or something."
"I think the exchange server is down. Is somebody taking a look at this problem?"
"I can't send anything right now. Is anybody else having a problem with their email?"
"It could be a network problem, but my email account is not working."
"I can't access my email right now. I think the server is down."
"Who should we contact if we are having email problems?"
"I keep getting junk mail in my work account. How did they get this email address?"
"How do I prevent junk mail?"
"Don't open any mail with the title, 'Your request has been approved!!!' It contains a virus. Please delete this mail at once if you see it."
Reply and
Reply All
When you reply all, it
goes out to everyone on the to line and the CC line. Reply only goes to the
sender. When we send out a mail to many people, you might see a sentence that
says 'little 'r' me'. This means to use the small R instead of the Big R. That
basically means to reply only to me instead of replying to everyone on the mail
thred.
Also, a mail is also referred to as a thread. That is because in the office, a mail can go on back and forth among many people so it becomes a chain of mail that started from one email. I'll use these terminologies in the next several example sentences.
"I sent out a mail to the whole group. I requested that they little 'r' me with their ideas."
"When I receive a mail sent out to multiple people, I keep forgetting to send to all."
This next sentence is not a spoken sentence. It's a common sentence used in email when someone forgets to send to everyone.
'Resending to include everyone.'
If you see this, that means the person sent a reply to the sender instead of replying all.
"Start a mail thread on your idea. I think everyone should get in on this discussion."
"Do you want me to start a mail thread for this?"
Also, a mail is also referred to as a thread. That is because in the office, a mail can go on back and forth among many people so it becomes a chain of mail that started from one email. I'll use these terminologies in the next several example sentences.
"I sent out a mail to the whole group. I requested that they little 'r' me with their ideas."
"When I receive a mail sent out to multiple people, I keep forgetting to send to all."
This next sentence is not a spoken sentence. It's a common sentence used in email when someone forgets to send to everyone.
'Resending to include everyone.'
If you see this, that means the person sent a reply to the sender instead of replying all.
"Start a mail thread on your idea. I think everyone should get in on this discussion."
"Do you want me to start a mail thread for this?"
Forwarding Mail
"I can't find
the mail about our next project. Can you forward the mail to me?"
"I got a useful email on productivity. I think I will forward it to our team."
"I have that email. I'll forward it to you."
"If you find that mail, please forward it to me."
"I'll forward you the mail I got from the manager."
"I received a mail from the marketing manager. I don't know what she is asking for. Can I forward the mail to you?"
"One of our clients is asking for more data on the BB project. Who should I forward this mail to?"
"Forward the complaint to the manager. I think he should see this."
Sending to an alternate email address is common when the work email is not working. Here are some sentences you can use if you are ever in this situation. Some companies do not allow this, so make sure your company does not have policies prohibiting this.
"My work email is currently down. Can you send it to my personal email address? It is someone@hotmail.com."
"I'm having problems with my work email account. Can you send it to someone@hotmail.com instead?"
"I'm having problems sending you an email to this account. Is there another email account you have that I can try?"
"Our exchange server is down for the next thirty minutes. If this is urgent, you can send me an email to my personal account. It is someone@hotmail.com."
Although I a couple of sentences on writing email sentences, most of this is to talk about email. Learning to write is not what I am trying to teach here. I want everyone to be able to speak. You should be practicing all of these lessons while talking along.
"I got a useful email on productivity. I think I will forward it to our team."
"I have that email. I'll forward it to you."
"If you find that mail, please forward it to me."
"I'll forward you the mail I got from the manager."
"I received a mail from the marketing manager. I don't know what she is asking for. Can I forward the mail to you?"
"One of our clients is asking for more data on the BB project. Who should I forward this mail to?"
"Forward the complaint to the manager. I think he should see this."
Sending to an alternate email address is common when the work email is not working. Here are some sentences you can use if you are ever in this situation. Some companies do not allow this, so make sure your company does not have policies prohibiting this.
"My work email is currently down. Can you send it to my personal email address? It is someone@hotmail.com."
"I'm having problems with my work email account. Can you send it to someone@hotmail.com instead?"
"I'm having problems sending you an email to this account. Is there another email account you have that I can try?"
"Our exchange server is down for the next thirty minutes. If this is urgent, you can send me an email to my personal account. It is someone@hotmail.com."
Although I a couple of sentences on writing email sentences, most of this is to talk about email. Learning to write is not what I am trying to teach here. I want everyone to be able to speak. You should be practicing all of these lessons while talking along.
General email sentences
"Hi Jack, this
is Steve. I have a proposal for the marketing idea. Can I email it to you?"
"I will need the information by noon. Can you email it to me soon?"
"The deadline for the project was an hour ago. Did you send the information?"
"I'm going to send you a rough draft. Can you review it and email me back?"
"I have sent three mails asking for information on their design. I haven't received a reply yet."
"Send a email to the team with your plan of action. I want everyone following this process."
"I have to send out my report before five. I won't have time to help you right now."
"I have a meeting at 4:00 pm. I think I should send out a reminder mail. I don't want anyone to forget."
"If you are not sure how to talk to the boss about this, why don't you email her?"
"Did you read the mail from the CEO? It's about our new mission statement."
"The CFO sent out a mail that describes our quarterly earnings."
When you are going on vacation, there is an option in some mail programs such as Outlook to reply with a message saying anything you want. After you turn on auto reply, there is a text field where you can type in your message. In general, this is what I have seen the most. Once again, the following is not spoken, but email language.
'I will be vacation until June 4th. I will be on email occasionally, but if you have an emergency, you can reach me at 555-555-5555. For information on financial reports, contact Suzy Mae. For information on quarterly earnings, contact Jim Beam. For other urgent matters, contact Billy McHale.'
"I will need the information by noon. Can you email it to me soon?"
"The deadline for the project was an hour ago. Did you send the information?"
"I'm going to send you a rough draft. Can you review it and email me back?"
"I have sent three mails asking for information on their design. I haven't received a reply yet."
"Send a email to the team with your plan of action. I want everyone following this process."
"I have to send out my report before five. I won't have time to help you right now."
"I have a meeting at 4:00 pm. I think I should send out a reminder mail. I don't want anyone to forget."
"If you are not sure how to talk to the boss about this, why don't you email her?"
"Did you read the mail from the CEO? It's about our new mission statement."
"The CFO sent out a mail that describes our quarterly earnings."
When you are going on vacation, there is an option in some mail programs such as Outlook to reply with a message saying anything you want. After you turn on auto reply, there is a text field where you can type in your message. In general, this is what I have seen the most. Once again, the following is not spoken, but email language.
'I will be vacation until June 4th. I will be on email occasionally, but if you have an emergency, you can reach me at 555-555-5555. For information on financial reports, contact Suzy Mae. For information on quarterly earnings, contact Jim Beam. For other urgent matters, contact Billy McHale.'
Email -
Interactive Practice
1
A: "I'll have the
report ready for review tonight. Will you be able to look at it tomorrow?"
B: "I'm not going
to be in the office tomorrow. Can you email it to me? I'll look at it from
home."
A: "Sure. What's
your email address?"
B: "It is
someone@hotmail.com."
A: "The file is
pretty big. Will the email allow me to send a file that big?"
B: "If it is under
one mega byte, you shouldn't have a problem."
A: "I don't think
it's that big. I'll send it tonight. Just get back to me when you finish the
review tomorrow."
B: "Ok. I should
be done with it by noon."
A: "That would be
great. Thanks."
2
A: "The manager
wants us to work on the data analysis together."
B: "Did you get an
email from her?"
A: "Yeah. You were
on the µto' line as well."
B: "I never got it
yet. When did you get the mail?"
A: "I got it about
30 minutes ago. Should we have her send the mail again?"
B: "No, I don't
want to bother her right now. Can you just forward the mail to me?"
A: "No problem.
I'll do it now."
B: "I'm still not
getting it."
A: "Maybe your
exchange server is down."
B: "I think you're
right. Can you send it to my personal account? It is someone@hotmail.com."
A: "Sure. Sending
now."
B: "I got it.
Thanks for forwarding me the mail. After I read it, let's get together to
discuss how we are going to work on the data analysis."
A: "Perfect. Just
ping me when ever."
3
A: "Hi Jack, this
is Cindy from the audit team."
B: "Hi Cindy."
A: "I'm calling in
regards to the 2003 bank statements you sent over to me last week. I cannot
find the August statement. Can you resend that one by any chance?"
B: "I can fax them
over to you in about an hour. Will that be ok?"
A: "That would be
great. I also have questions on several of the withdrawals. Do you know who I
should contact to straighten this out?"
B: "You should
talk to Joe Smith. He is our senior accountant over here. His number is
555-123-4567."
A: "That was Joe
Smith at 555-123-4567?"
B: "That's
correct."
A: "Do you have
his email address. I might need it later."
B: "Sure. It's
joesmith@ourcompany.com."
A:
"joesmith@ourcompany.com. Ok. Thanks for all your help."
B: "No problem.
Have a good day."
A: "You too.
Thanks again. Bye."
Explanations and Presentations General
This lesson will give
some guidelines on how to explain something and how to speak during
presentations. Because I cannot be specific to every topic, I'll choose general
ones. You should primarily be looking at the structure and style for this
Business English lesson.
It is understandable if
you feel nervous or uneasy about having to explain something in
English. Because
English is not your first language, it is very difficult. However, in the
office, you will be in many situations when you have to explain something. Here
are 3 tips to make your explanation or presentation easier.
First, you should not
talk fast. I work in a large company with many different people from all over
the world. The hardest time I have when listening to someone is when they talk
fast with a bad accent. The problem they have is that they are fluent and
comfortable speaking English, but they do not realize how bad their accent is.
If you speak slower, you can avoid this problem. Unless you are certain that
your accent is understandable, always speak a little slower.
Second, you should
speak clearly. Say each word clearly and emphasize the important words. Even if
they don't understand every word in your sentence, they will understand the
whole meaning with proper emphasis.
Third, prepare and
practice ahead of time. You should record yourself and listen to the recording.
You should also get an American friend to judge you. This is a lot of work you
have to do in the beginning, but this is VERY important. Even though it will
make your presentation or explanation clearer and better, that is not the
reason I am saying you should do the recording and getting a friend to listen.
The reason why this is so important is because you are laying the foundation on
proper communication in regards to intonation and pronunciation. For example,
if you don't do this, you might think you don't have a problem and you will
continue to practice incorrectly. Soon, you will be someone who can talk fast
but have terrible pronunciation. You will become the type of people I
described... hard to understand. If you take the time to practice for several
hours before each presentation, you will be practicing the correct way to
enhance your English abilities.
Explanation
The third step above is
primarily for presentations. When you have to give an explanation, you might
not have time to prepare for it. If someone asks you a question, you can't tell
them that you will need two hours to prepare before answering.
However, if it is work related, you have the ability to anticipate questions ahead of time. Think of your area of expertise and list many questions you have heard from co-workers or friends. If you speak in your own language, you know exactly how to say it without preparing for it. But in English, you don't know where to begin. List all your answers out and learn how to say it in English. If you do this, then anytime you get asked a question about your area, you can quickly respond. Here is an example with more tips.
"Can you explain the process of selling a house and the cost associated with it?"
"You can either sell the house by yourself or get an agent. Since most of the people use an agent, I will explain that. The first thing you need to do is find a sellers agent. The agent will list your house on the market. After the house is on the market, people who are looking to buy a house will find a buyers agent. The buyers agent looks through the list of houses for sale posted by the sellers agent. The buyers agent shows your house to potential buyers. When someone makes an offer, the buyers agent will let the sellers agent know about the price that the buyer has offered. After everyone agrees, the house is sold. The price associated with selling a house is based on commission. The sellers agent will get an average of 2.5 percent of the selling price and the buyers agent will get 2.5 percent as well. If the price of the house was $300,000, then each agent will get $7500, costing you a total of $15,000."
You're first reaction might be, 'when am I ever going to be able to say all this at one time?' But it is much easier than you think. I'll explain further.
We have someone asking about selling a house or something. We have to explain the process. Even if you don't know the process of selling a house inAmerica , you
can use the same guideline for your area of expertise. If you can say each
sentence individually, then you can say all of them put together.
I start by saying there are a couple of ways to sell a house.
Then the example says you will explain the more common process.
However, if it is work related, you have the ability to anticipate questions ahead of time. Think of your area of expertise and list many questions you have heard from co-workers or friends. If you speak in your own language, you know exactly how to say it without preparing for it. But in English, you don't know where to begin. List all your answers out and learn how to say it in English. If you do this, then anytime you get asked a question about your area, you can quickly respond. Here is an example with more tips.
"Can you explain the process of selling a house and the cost associated with it?"
"You can either sell the house by yourself or get an agent. Since most of the people use an agent, I will explain that. The first thing you need to do is find a sellers agent. The agent will list your house on the market. After the house is on the market, people who are looking to buy a house will find a buyers agent. The buyers agent looks through the list of houses for sale posted by the sellers agent. The buyers agent shows your house to potential buyers. When someone makes an offer, the buyers agent will let the sellers agent know about the price that the buyer has offered. After everyone agrees, the house is sold. The price associated with selling a house is based on commission. The sellers agent will get an average of 2.5 percent of the selling price and the buyers agent will get 2.5 percent as well. If the price of the house was $300,000, then each agent will get $7500, costing you a total of $15,000."
You're first reaction might be, 'when am I ever going to be able to say all this at one time?' But it is much easier than you think. I'll explain further.
We have someone asking about selling a house or something. We have to explain the process. Even if you don't know the process of selling a house in
I start by saying there are a couple of ways to sell a house.
Then the example says you will explain the more common process.
From here, it is basically listing steps.
1. "The first thing you need to do is find a sellers agent."
2. "The agent will list your house on the market."
3. "After the house is on the market, people who are looking to buy a house will find a buyers agent."
4. "The buyers agent looks through the list of houses for sale posted by the sellers agent."
5. "The buyers agent shows your house to potential buyers."
6. "When someone makes an offer, the buyers agent will let the sellers agent know about the price that the buyer has offered."
7. "After everyone agrees, the house is sold."
8. "The price associated with selling a house is based on commission."
9. "The sellers agent will get an average of 2.5 percent of the selling price and the buyers agent will get 2.5 percent as well."
10. "If the price of the house was $300,000, then each agent will get $7500, costing you a total of $15,000."
This list seems pretty simple now. Each sentence is relatively short. There is no difference between the long paragraph and the listed out items. Both contain the same words. All I did was put them together.
Finally, if you feel that you cannot create these sentences even in a list form, use an example that you are familiar with. I'm sure you will have an easy time creating a list if the topic is in your area of expertise.
I recommend listening to the paragraph again. But this time, listen to the speed I talk. Also, listen to the pauses after each sentence. Notice that I don't have unnecessary words like 'and', 'moreover', 'furthermore', 'Afterwards', and so on. These are good words, but you don't need them that much when you are explaining something verbally. Using pauses between sentences and speaking clearly and slowly is the best way to communicate an explanation.
Presentation
Presentations
are longer than an explanation, but it is easier in the sense that you have
time to prepare for it. The biggest mistake I have seen is that people do not
use short simple sentences. Many of the best presentations from English
speakers I have seen are those who use simple sentences that are easy to
understand. Remember that a long paragraph can consist of 10 short sentences.
It is still effective and much easier to say.
Many times, a person will be using a presentation software like Power Point. If that is the case, then you should prepare your slides and a separate document with your sentences for each slide. You shouldn't read them, but at least it is there just in case you forget to mention something. Use it as a preparation material before the presentation and reference during the presentation. Each sentence should be step by step explaining the content on the slide.
I am not going to be giving an example because presentations are all different depending on the subject. But keep in mind the process I explained on the house selling example. Keep the sentences short, speak slowly and clearly, put emphasis on key words, and leave a short pause after each sentence.
There are many times when you will have to explain something. Here are some questions you might here.
"What did you do this week?"
"What are you going to do next week?"
"What is your schedule like for the next two weeks?"
"Can you explain how to perform an evaluation for a partner feedback?"
"How do I perform a refund for a credit card purchase?"
There are numerous questions like these you might run into. To answer all of them, just follow the list example.
"This week, I finished the analysis on Ford Motor, I started writing a report on international market penetration, and I showed our new employee how to use our software."
This example is very simple. It is basically a list of three things. You don't need to include any words in between.
You can use this same style of answer for many different types of questions.
"Next week, I have to finish my report, research information on GM Motors, and make a presentation on our market strategy."
"To perform a feedback on a partner you need to specify who the partner is, what project they worked on, the outcome of the project, where they need to improve, and finally what they did well."
"On the credit card machine, press the refund button. Then type in the credit card number and press enter. Type in the amount, and press enter. That's all you need to do."
Whenever you are giving an explanation, remember the easiest way to do it is by giving a list and putting them together. In order to be able to do this, you must know how to say key words in your area of expertise.
When you have to give a presentation, remember that preparing is the most important. As I said earlier, take the time on your first several presentations to record yourself and find a friend to listen to your presentation.
Finally, let's review the three key steps you need to remember when giving an explanation or a presentation.
Don't talk fast: Even people with perfect English have this problem. Talking fast is not good when you are explaining something or giving a presentation.
Talk clearly: Making the words in each sentence clear will help anyone to understand you better.
Prepare and Practice: This is the most important. As time goes on, you will realize how much your preparation will help with your overall English skills.
Many times, a person will be using a presentation software like Power Point. If that is the case, then you should prepare your slides and a separate document with your sentences for each slide. You shouldn't read them, but at least it is there just in case you forget to mention something. Use it as a preparation material before the presentation and reference during the presentation. Each sentence should be step by step explaining the content on the slide.
I am not going to be giving an example because presentations are all different depending on the subject. But keep in mind the process I explained on the house selling example. Keep the sentences short, speak slowly and clearly, put emphasis on key words, and leave a short pause after each sentence.
There are many times when you will have to explain something. Here are some questions you might here.
"What did you do this week?"
"What are you going to do next week?"
"What is your schedule like for the next two weeks?"
"Can you explain how to perform an evaluation for a partner feedback?"
"How do I perform a refund for a credit card purchase?"
There are numerous questions like these you might run into. To answer all of them, just follow the list example.
"This week, I finished the analysis on Ford Motor, I started writing a report on international market penetration, and I showed our new employee how to use our software."
This example is very simple. It is basically a list of three things. You don't need to include any words in between.
You can use this same style of answer for many different types of questions.
"Next week, I have to finish my report, research information on GM Motors, and make a presentation on our market strategy."
"To perform a feedback on a partner you need to specify who the partner is, what project they worked on, the outcome of the project, where they need to improve, and finally what they did well."
"On the credit card machine, press the refund button. Then type in the credit card number and press enter. Type in the amount, and press enter. That's all you need to do."
Whenever you are giving an explanation, remember the easiest way to do it is by giving a list and putting them together. In order to be able to do this, you must know how to say key words in your area of expertise.
When you have to give a presentation, remember that preparing is the most important. As I said earlier, take the time on your first several presentations to record yourself and find a friend to listen to your presentation.
Finally, let's review the three key steps you need to remember when giving an explanation or a presentation.
Don't talk fast: Even people with perfect English have this problem. Talking fast is not good when you are explaining something or giving a presentation.
Talk clearly: Making the words in each sentence clear will help anyone to understand you better.
Prepare and Practice: This is the most important. As time goes on, you will realize how much your preparation will help with your overall English skills.
Before the meeting
There are many
questions to ask before a meeting. If you are curious about what the meeting
will cover, you will need to ask the organizer of the meeting. You can also ask
things like how long the meeting will take, and who is coming to the meeting.
Let's try a couple of these sentences.
"Hi Jack. Do you know who is coming to your meeting at 2:00?"
"Who all did you invite to the triage meeting?"
"Hi Jack. How long do you think the meeting will be?"
"I have to schedule another appointment at 4:00 but I don't want it to overlap with yours. How long is the meeting going to be?"
"Is the meeting going to be more than an hour?"
"What time was the meeting again?"
"When are you going to make that presentation? I thought it was today?"
Here are common statements people use when they can't attend a meeting.
"I have another appointment that conflicts with your meeting. I will not be able to make it."
"I have another meeting that I cannot miss. I won't be able to make yours."
"I won't be able to go to the 3:00 meeting. I have another appointment at the same time."
"I can't go to the meeting at 4:00. I have a doctor's appointment. Can you take notes for me?"
"I'm going to be out of town tomorrow, so I won't be able to attend the quarterly meeting. Can you send me a mail on the topics that were discussed?"
"Hi Jack. Do you know who is coming to your meeting at 2:00?"
"Who all did you invite to the triage meeting?"
"Hi Jack. How long do you think the meeting will be?"
"I have to schedule another appointment at 4:00 but I don't want it to overlap with yours. How long is the meeting going to be?"
"Is the meeting going to be more than an hour?"
"What time was the meeting again?"
"When are you going to make that presentation? I thought it was today?"
Here are common statements people use when they can't attend a meeting.
"I have another appointment that conflicts with your meeting. I will not be able to make it."
"I have another meeting that I cannot miss. I won't be able to make yours."
"I won't be able to go to the 3:00 meeting. I have another appointment at the same time."
"I can't go to the meeting at 4:00. I have a doctor's appointment. Can you take notes for me?"
"I'm going to be out of town tomorrow, so I won't be able to attend the quarterly meeting. Can you send me a mail on the topics that were discussed?"
Canceling a Meeting
If you are the meeting
organizer, then there are times when you have to cancel a meeting. Here are
some sentences you can use for this situation.
"There are four people who will not be able to attend the meeting tomorrow. I am going to reschedule the meeting to a more convenient time."
"The director asked that we postpone the finance meeting until the quarterly report comes out. So I'll send an update with the new date and time later this week."
Some meetings are weekly meetings that occur at the same time. It is common that these meetings are canceled when there is nothing to talk about.
"There is nothing new to discuss this week, so we are going to cancel this week's agenda meeting."
"I am running late this morning. Let's postpone the meeting until the afternoon."
"I can't make it in tomorrow, so let's cancel this week's meeting. I'll email everyone if something new comes up."
"There are four people who will not be able to attend the meeting tomorrow. I am going to reschedule the meeting to a more convenient time."
"The director asked that we postpone the finance meeting until the quarterly report comes out. So I'll send an update with the new date and time later this week."
Some meetings are weekly meetings that occur at the same time. It is common that these meetings are canceled when there is nothing to talk about.
"There is nothing new to discuss this week, so we are going to cancel this week's agenda meeting."
"I am running late this morning. Let's postpone the meeting until the afternoon."
"I can't make it in tomorrow, so let's cancel this week's meeting. I'll email everyone if something new comes up."
During the
Meeting
If you have to talk in
a meeting, there are three general reasons. You might have to ask a question,
state your opinion, or you will have to ask for clarity on something you didn't
understand. Let's see some of these sentences.
Raising a Question
Depending on the type
of meeting, you might have to wait for the meeting to end before asking a
question, you might have to raise your hand to ask a question, or you can
simply ask a question any time. I'll give an example on each of these.
If you are in a type of
meeting where you can ask a question at any time, then you can say this.
"I have a question. Why is marketing not
handling the portion on end user analysis? They usually did this work in the
past."
"How will the new addition to our project affect the deadline that
we have?"
"Are we making sure to incorporate user feedback on the changes we
are making?"
Stating
your Opinion
Basically, you can ask
any questions, there is no specific way to do it. This is the same when you are
talking about your opinion. Someone might ask what you think about the idea or
situation. You will simply speak your answer.
"I agree with Mark. The correct approach is to send out the tools
to our partners before making it public to everyone."
"In my opinion, I think we should introduce our new line of
printers in August. Many companies get more funding at this time, and students
are school shopping. Our target market will be more responsive to our ads
during this time period."
"I think we can go either way. I believe both solutions will take
care of it."
Asking
for clarity
Asking for clarity is
similar to asking a question. The only difference is that they already answered
it and you don't understand. So you should state exactly what you don't know,
or ask for clarity on a specific part of the question.
"I didn't understand why we are going to be late. I thought we had
everything planned out early. What were the reasons again?"
"Can you elaborate on how this process can help the sales
department?"
"Can you clarify the second step in your solution proposal? I don't
understand why it is necessary."
After the Meeting
It is common to talk
about meetings afterwards. Sometimes it is to say how useless it was, or that
you were bored, but there are times when someone might ask you for feedback.
Other times, you might want feedback if you were the person holding the
meeting. Let's cover these here.
Asking
for Feedback
"What did you think about my presentation?"
"Did you think the meeting went ok?"
"Can you provide feedback on the meeting we just had?"
"Did you find the meeting useful?"
"Did the meeting help to clarify the current situation?"
"Is there any part of our discussion during the meeting that you
are still unsure about?"
Providing
Feedback
Even if you think the
meeting was boring and useless, you can't say that unless you are talking to a
close friend. Many times in the office, you have to give a professional answer.
"I thought the presentation went well. You provided great
information and I think everyone was impressed."
"The meeting went well. We covered a lot of information and made
some important decisions."
"The whole presentation went pretty well, but next time I would
recommend that you talk a little slower. When we were running out of time, you
started speaking too fast and it was hard to keep up."
"Most of the time, our weekly meeting is pretty dull, but today was
quite useful."
"I understand what is happening to our project now, but I'm still
unclear about exactly who is affected by this change."
General Statements
"I have to go. I have a meeting I'm late for."
"I have to go to a meeting now. I'll talk to you later."
"I forgot about my 1:00 meeting. I don't have much time for
lunch."
"I'll finish the feedback form after my meeting."
"I'll be in meetings all day today."
"I have five meetings today, so I won't have time to help you with
this now. Let's set up a time for tomorrow."
"The meeting went an hour over."
"The meeting was canceled."
"The meeting started 15 minutes late."
"George didn't arrive to the meeting on time."
"We finished late because John had problems with his computer during
the presentation portion of the meeting."
"Are you going to the company meeting next week?"
"Can you set up a meeting for our brainstorm session?"
"My calendar looks pretty clear on Thursday. Set up a meeting for
that day."
If you have a close
friend in the office, then you can speak more candidly. Here are some general
statements you can make about meetings. But be careful who you say them to.
"I hate meetings. I think they are a waste of time. I'm an
engineer, not a planner."
"I don't know why I have to go to those meetings. I never learn
anything from them and I never say a thing."
"I can't believe our weekly meeting is at six o'clock in the
morning. I hate waking up that early."
"If I skip that meeting, I wonder if anyone will notice."
"That meeting was hilarious. I can't believe the manager forgot
John's name."
"I get so sleepy at meetings."
"I almost fell asleep during that meeting."
"I had a hard time keeping myself from laughing. I saw you falling
asleep during the meeting."
Phone Call
Talking on the phone is
very common in the office. You will be in a situation where you have to call
someone, receive a phone call, leave a message, return a call, and a variety of
other tasks. We will use this lesson to cover all the details about making and
receiving phone calls.
Receiving a call is probably the easiest.
"Hello, this is Mike."
"Microsoft, this is Steve."
Calling someone is a little more difficult. You should state your name, where you are from, what you are calling for, and the question. Let's give it a try through an example.
"Hi Mary, this is Michael Johnson from ABC Consulting. I am reviewing the financial data for the payroll project. I will need the 2002 fiscal report to complete this task. Do you know where I can get a copy?"
Receiving a call is probably the easiest.
"Hello, this is Mike."
"Microsoft, this is Steve."
Calling someone is a little more difficult. You should state your name, where you are from, what you are calling for, and the question. Let's give it a try through an example.
"Hi Mary, this is Michael Johnson from ABC Consulting. I am reviewing the financial data for the payroll project. I will need the 2002 fiscal report to complete this task. Do you know where I can get a copy?"
This example is very clear, organized, and concise. It first explains who the person is, what they are doing, and what they need. If you need to call someone to obtain information, you can use this type of sentence.
Let's try one more, but this time, you are asking for help.
"Hi Bob. This is Steven from ABC Company. I'm calling in regards to the data entry program you created. I'm having trouble locating where the connection is made to the server. Can you help me with this?"
Similarly, this phone call starts with an introduction of the person, a quick sentence on what the call is regarding, and a short description on what this person needs. If you are in this situation, use this process and write it down so you can say what you need smoothly. After you become familiar with it, you will not need to write it down anymore and you should be able to say it fluently.
If you have questions and a consultant or another business employee is visiting your company, then asking a question to them is very similar to asking a question to anyone else.
"Hi Bob. I'm George. I'm the technical writer for this project. I had a question regarding the installation process. If you have a minute, can you show me the installation process? I'm having problems on the confirmation section."
Usually, when a person is visiting your company, then it is polite to tell them your position so they can understand what type of help you will need. In the previous example, we used the same process of asking for help with an introduction, telling them what it is regarding, and what the problem or question is.
Verifying Information
Sometimes you have to verify an order, or double check a figure. If you have the information and you just want to verify that it is accurate, then you can use these types of sentences.
"Hi Debra, I'm analyzing the log files and noticed entry 14 was negative 42. Can you confirm if this is accurate?"
"I see that our April 2003 revenue was 1.2 million dollars. Can you double check that this figure is accurate?"
"I am going to meet with the CFO in an hour. Can you look through this report and double check my findings? It should only take you 20 minutes or so."
Telling person you will call them
back
If you
receive a question from a client or customer that you do not know, you can
either tell them that you will find the answer for them, or tell them to call
someone else. Let's learn how to do these things professionally.
"I don't have the answer right off hand. I'll need to find that information for you. Will it be ok if I call you back in about 30 minutes?"
"I believe I can find that information for you. It might take 10 minutes or so. Can I call you back with the information?"
"I'm not sure about the answer. I'll find the information and call you right back. Will that be ok?"
"I'm not sure about this one. Let me ask my manager. Can you please hold?"
"I don't have the answer right off hand. I'll need to find that information for you. Will it be ok if I call you back in about 30 minutes?"
"I believe I can find that information for you. It might take 10 minutes or so. Can I call you back with the information?"
"I'm not sure about the answer. I'll find the information and call you right back. Will that be ok?"
"I'm not sure about this one. Let me ask my manager. Can you please hold?"
Redirecting
Receiving a Call
"I believe Joe Carry in marketing can help you with that. Do you have his contact information?"
"I'm not sure about that. I'm pretty sure Mitch Smith will be able to answer this and other questions. Let me give you his number."
Making a Call
"Can you redirect me to that person?"
"Can I get his contact information?"
"Can I get his phone number?"
"What is the best way to contact her?"
"Can you direct me to someone who can help?"
"Hi, this is Matt from ABC Company. I have some questions on your Platinum level business package. Can you redirect me to someone who can help?"
"I believe Joe Carry in marketing can help you with that. Do you have his contact information?"
"I'm not sure about that. I'm pretty sure Mitch Smith will be able to answer this and other questions. Let me give you his number."
Making a Call
"Can you redirect me to that person?"
"Can I get his contact information?"
"Can I get his phone number?"
"What is the best way to contact her?"
"Can you direct me to someone who can help?"
"Hi, this is Matt from ABC Company. I have some questions on your Platinum level business package. Can you redirect me to someone who can help?"
Leaving Messages
When you call someone
and they are not there, you have to leave a message on their voice mail.
Remember to state your name, your company, and what the phone call is
regarding. Then leave your phone number even though you think they have it.
"Hi Mary, this is Josh from ABC Company. I have some questions
regarding the financial data you sent me yesterday. Can you give me a call back
when you have time? My number is 555-123-4567. Thank you."
"Hi Jack, this is Julie from Consult R Us. I am missing a couple
pages on the document you sent me. Can you call me when you are free? My number
again is 555-321-7654. Thank you."
In some cases, you will
receive a phone message like this. If you have to call them back and they are
not there also, you can leave a message saying, you are returning their call.
Here is an example.
"Hi Josh, this is Mary and I am returning your call. I'll be in the
office for the next three hours, so feel free to call me back any time. Just in
case, my number is 555-234-5678."
"Hi Julie, this is Jack. I double checked the documents I sent you
and I am not sure what pages you are missing. I might not be at my desk, so
feel free to call me on my cell phone. The number is 227-1000. Hope to hear
from you soon so we can straighten this out."
On another occasion,
you might call someone and they might not call you back. In this case, it is
polite to call them again. This is how you can leave a second message.
"Hi Mary, this is Josh again from ABC Company. I'm not sure if you
got my first message so I am leaving one more. I have some questions regarding
the financial data you sent me several days ago. Can you call me at
555-123-4567 when you get a chance? Thank you."
If the company does not
have voice mail, you can leave a message with the secretary. After asking for
the person you are looking for, if they say they are not in, then leave a
message with them.
"Can you have Julie return my call? This is Jack, and my number is
555-123-4567."
Sending and receiving information
While you are working,
you will need to send information back and forth to business partners or to
clients and customers. Since email is covered in its own separate section,
let's work on sending packages through the mail and the fax machine.
"Hi Jack, I have the final documents requiring your signature. I will have them delivered to you by tomorrow. If you can sign them and return them, we can submit the documents by Friday."
"Hi Ruth, I have the escrow papers ready for review. Should I mail them to you, or can I fax them?"
"Do you have a fax machine?"
"Can I have your fax number?"
"When you finish the final review, can you fax over the documents. Our fax number is 555-345-6789."
"I have a package that I am going to send out. I will Fed-Ex it to you tonight."
Fed-Ex is a short way of saying Federal Express. It is a delivery company that ships immediately. A lot of businesses in the States use this method of shipping things, so it became common to say, 'Fed-Ex it.'
"I believe I have your fax number. Is it 555-234-5678?"
If a person said they will send information, you might have to call them to check on the status if you haven't received it.
"Hi Mary, this is Diana at ABC Marketing Co. Can I get a status on the fax you are going to send over?"
"Can you check on the status of the documents you are faxing to me? I haven't received it."
"Hi Mary, I didn't receive the fax last night. Can you fax it again? We should also confirm what fax number you have on file."
"Hi Jack, I have the final documents requiring your signature. I will have them delivered to you by tomorrow. If you can sign them and return them, we can submit the documents by Friday."
"Hi Ruth, I have the escrow papers ready for review. Should I mail them to you, or can I fax them?"
"Do you have a fax machine?"
"Can I have your fax number?"
"When you finish the final review, can you fax over the documents. Our fax number is 555-345-6789."
"I have a package that I am going to send out. I will Fed-Ex it to you tonight."
Fed-Ex is a short way of saying Federal Express. It is a delivery company that ships immediately. A lot of businesses in the States use this method of shipping things, so it became common to say, 'Fed-Ex it.'
"I believe I have your fax number. Is it 555-234-5678?"
If a person said they will send information, you might have to call them to check on the status if you haven't received it.
"Hi Mary, this is Diana at ABC Marketing Co. Can I get a status on the fax you are going to send over?"
"Can you check on the status of the documents you are faxing to me? I haven't received it."
"Hi Mary, I didn't receive the fax last night. Can you fax it again? We should also confirm what fax number you have on file."
Business Phone Call - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hello? This is
Steve."
B: "Hi Steve, this
is Mary from ABC Company. I'm returning your call."
A: "Hi Mary. How
are you doing?"
B: "I'm doing
great thanks."
A: "Thanks for
returning my call. I couldn't figure out why the ending balance on fiscal year
2003 didn't match the beginning balance on of 2004."
B: "When I
checked, it was matching. How much is the difference?"
A: "The amount is
exactly $42,000."
B: "Oh. I know
what the problem is. We opened another bank account at the end of fiscal year
2003. I might not have included the new bank statements when I sent over the
information."
A: "That makes
sense. I'm just glad it wasn't out of my miscalculation. Can you send over the
statements? I should be done by end of day since everything looks good."
B: "Sure. I'll fax
them to you immediately. Is 555-123-4567 the number I should fax it to?"
A: "Yes. That is
the correct number."
B: "I'll do it
right now."
A: "Thank you for
your help."
B: "I should have
sent them over to you the first time. I apologize for that."
A: "No
problem."
B: "Thank
you."
A: "Thank you.
Bye."
2
A: "Hello, ABC
Company."
B: "Hi, this is
Janet from Consult R Us. May I speak with Alex please?"
A: "He's in a
meeting right now. Would you like to leave a message?"
B: "Yes. Can you
have Alex call me back when he is available? My name again is Janet, and he can
reach me at 555-987-6543."
A: "It's Janet at
555-987-6543. Can I tell him what this is regarding?"
B: "He sent over a
fax, and the last page didn't print out. I will need for him to resend the fax
to me."
A: "I'll let him
know."
B: "Thank
you."
A: "Thank you for
calling ABC."
B: "Good
bye."
A: "Bye."
3
A: "Microsoft,
this is Steve."
B: "Hi Steve, this
is Richard from Third Hand Testing. I'm calling in regards to the MSN
assignment. Do you have a minute to answer a couple of questions?"
A: "Sure. What can
I help you with?"
B: "We originally
agreed on 5 testing procedures, but our program manager received a mail
indicating 4 testing procedures. Is 4 the correct number?"
A: "Yes it is. We
found that we can do the last one here."
B: "Great. Does
the timeline change because we reduced one of the testing procedures?"
A: "We don't have
to change the timeline. Our original timeframe was very aggressive."
B: "That makes our
job a little easier."
A: "Do you have
any other questions?"
B: "No. That's all
I had. Thanks for your time."
A: "No
problem."
B: "Ok. Good
bye."
A: "Bye."
Confirming your Flight
If you are taking a plane to travel,
then you will be calling a travel agent and purchasing a ticket in your own
country. We will not cover this portion because you can do it in your own
language. But once you arrive to your English speaking location, you might need
to change your flight and talk to English speaking people. More likely, they
will have people speaking your language, but just in case, we will cover some
general topics about air traveling here.
Confirming your flight
Some airlines require you to call a couple days in advance to confirm your
departure date. Here are some sentences you will be asked and what you will
need to say.
You: "I would like to confirm my flight."
Them: "Can I get your ticket number?"
You: "The number is 45-6-43."
Them: "You are scheduled to depart on June 15th at 1:00 pm.
Is this correct?"
You: "Yes it is."
Them: "Is anybody else traveling with you?"
You: "Yes, my wife."
Them: "Can I have the other ticket number?"
You: "It is 45-6-44."
Them: "Your tickets have been confirmed. Please arrive at the
airport 3 hours before your flight departs. Thank you for calling."
Some other questions you might hear are similar to the ones you might hear at
the airport counter.
"Would you like to book your seats now?"
"Would you like a window seat or an aisle seat?"
Departing Date
Reserving a date to
depart or changing a departure date
If you have an open ended ticket or would like to change your departing date, you will have to call and reserve a date to depart.
"I have an open ended ticket and I would like to schedule a departure date."
"I have a ticket and I need to schedule a departure date."
"I am scheduled to depart on June 15th. Can I change this to a later date?"
"I have a ticket to depart on June 15th. I would like to see if there is an earlier flight available."
With any of these questions, the other person will usually ask for your ticket number. After that, they will ask you what date you want to depart.
"What date would you like to depart?"
"What date would you like to change it to?"
"When do you want to depart?"
You should respond by selecting a date.
"I would like to leave on June 22nd."
"Is June 22nd available?"
"Can you check if June 22nd is possible?"
"I was hoping to reserve a seat for June 22nd."
After you select a date, they will either say ok, or they will tell you the closest dates available to your selection.
"Yes. We have seats available for the 22nd. Would you like me to reserve them?"
"On the 22nd, the departure time is 1:00pm. Should I reserve them?"
"We have two flights departing on that date. Would you like to depart at 10am or 7pm?"
"I'm sorry, but we do not have any available seats on the 22nd. Should I put you on the waiting list?"
"I'm sorry, there are no departures for the 22nd. We have a flight leaving on the 21st and the 24th. Will either of these days work for you?"
"The 22nd is full. The next available flight is on the 23rd. Would you like me to reserve a seat on that date?"
If you have an open ended ticket or would like to change your departing date, you will have to call and reserve a date to depart.
"I have an open ended ticket and I would like to schedule a departure date."
"I have a ticket and I need to schedule a departure date."
"I am scheduled to depart on June 15th. Can I change this to a later date?"
"I have a ticket to depart on June 15th. I would like to see if there is an earlier flight available."
With any of these questions, the other person will usually ask for your ticket number. After that, they will ask you what date you want to depart.
"What date would you like to depart?"
"What date would you like to change it to?"
"When do you want to depart?"
You should respond by selecting a date.
"I would like to leave on June 22nd."
"Is June 22nd available?"
"Can you check if June 22nd is possible?"
"I was hoping to reserve a seat for June 22nd."
After you select a date, they will either say ok, or they will tell you the closest dates available to your selection.
"Yes. We have seats available for the 22nd. Would you like me to reserve them?"
"On the 22nd, the departure time is 1:00pm. Should I reserve them?"
"We have two flights departing on that date. Would you like to depart at 10am or 7pm?"
"I'm sorry, but we do not have any available seats on the 22nd. Should I put you on the waiting list?"
"I'm sorry, there are no departures for the 22nd. We have a flight leaving on the 21st and the 24th. Will either of these days work for you?"
"The 22nd is full. The next available flight is on the 23rd. Would you like me to reserve a seat on that date?"
At the Counter
When you first reach
the counter, you should give them your ticket and your passport. The first
question they usually ask is how many are traveling with you.
"Is anybody traveling with you today?"
"Is anybody else traveling with you?"
"Are just you two traveling today?"
All airlines have a
list of questions they have to ask you. Let's look at some of these questions.
"Did someone you do not know ask you to take something on the plane
with you?"
"Did you have possession of your luggage since you packed?"
"Did you leave your luggage unattended at all in the airport?"
"Are you carrying any weapons or firearms?"
"Are you carrying any flammable material?"
"Do you have any perishable food items?"
If you don't
understand, you can't say yes or no to all of them. The correct answer for some
of them is 'no' and some of them is 'yes'.
"How many luggages are you checking in?"
"Do you have a carry on?"
"Can you place your baggage up here?"
"How many carry on bags are you taking with you?"
Afterwards, they might
ask if you prefer an aisle seat or a window seat.
"Do you prefer window or aisle?"
If they are out of
aisle seats, they will ask you if window is ok.
"We do not have
any aisle seats remaining. Is a window seat ok with you or would you prefer a
middle seat?"
Some people like to be
by the emergency exit. You can ask for that seat.
"Do you have a seat next to the emergency exit?"
"Can I have a seat closest to the emergency exit?"
If they do, then you
will get a seat by the exit, but if they don't, they will try to give you one
that is close.
"All the seats next to the exit have been taken. I have a seat
directly in front of it. Would you like that one?"
Finally, they will tell
you the gate number and the boarding time.
"Here are your tickets. The gate number is on the bottom of the
ticket. They will start boarding 20 minutes before the departure time. You
should report to gate C2 by then. C2 is around the corner and down the hall.
Thank you."
Finding the Gate
They will usually tell
you what gate you should go to, but if you need to ask again, I will provide an
example question. Also, you might need to ask someone where the gate is
located.
"Which gate did you say it was?"
"What was the gate number again?"
"Can you point me towards the gate?"
"How do I get to the gate again?"
"How do I get to gate C2?"
"Where is gate C2?"
"Which gate did you say it was?"
"What was the gate number again?"
"Can you point me towards the gate?"
"How do I get to the gate again?"
"How do I get to gate C2?"
"Where is gate C2?"
At the Airport - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Welcome. May I
have your tickets?"
B: "Here you
go."
A: "Is anybody
else traveling with you two?"
B: "No. It's just
us."
A: "Do you have
your passports with you?"
B: "Yes. Here it
is."
A: "I'm going to
ask you a series of questions. Please respond with a yes or a no."
B: "Ok."
A: "Did someone you
do not know ask you to take something on the plane with you?"
B: "No."
A: "Did you have
possession of your luggage since you packed?"
B: "Yes."
A: "Did you leave
your luggage unattended at all in the airport?"
B: "No."
A: "Are you
carrying any weapons or firearms?"
B: "No."
A: "Are you
carrying any flammable material?"
B: "No."
A: "Do you have
any perishable food items?"
B: "No."
A: "Great. Can you
place your baggage over here?"
B: "Sure."
A: "Would you like
an aisle or a window seat?"
B: "Window seat
please."
A: "Ok. I am
placing you two in 21A and 21B. The gate number is C2. It is on the bottom of
the ticket. They will start boarding 20 minutes before the departure time. C2
is located around the corner through the hall. Thank you."
B: "Can you point
me to gate C2?"
A: "Sure. It's
that way. Around that corner."
B: "Great. Thank
you."
Car Availability
When you travel, it is
common to rent a car. You will either call and make a reservation, or you will
rent one by walking up to the counter. We will cover both scenarios here.
At the Counter
If you are at the
airport, you can ask an airport employee, "where is the rental car booth?" or "where can I rent a car?"
After you arrive at the
place, you will ask if you any cars are available. Here is a common script.
"Hi. I would like to rent a car."
"Do you have any cars available?"
They might ask, "Did you make a reservation?"
In this scenario, you didn't so you can answer, 'no.' If they don't have any
cars available, they will say, "I'm
sorry, we do not have any cars available today." If that is the case,
then go to the next counter. Most airports have numerous car rental booths so
you can keep asking until you find a company that has a car available. If you
are going during peak vacation periods, it might be good to call and reserve
one. But let's continue with this scenario.
If they have a car
available, they will ask what type of car or what size.
"What size car would you like?"
"What type of car would you like?"
"What type of car do you need?"
"What sizes do you have?"
"What are my options?"
"We have compact, midsize, full size, luxury, SUV, and a
minivan."
"How much is the full size car?"
"How much is the midsize car?"
"How many does the full size car seat?"
"How many can fit in the midsize car?"
"I'll take a midsize car."
Duration and General Questions
In order to verify if
they can give you the car you requested, they need to know how long you will
need the car for.
"How long will you be needing the car?"
"How long will you be renting the car?"
"When do you need the car till?"
"I'll need the car for two weeks."
"I want to rent it for one week."
"I need it for 4 days."
"I need it for just a day."
They might ask you to
fill out a form, or they might ask you many questions.
"What is your last name?"
"What is your first name?"
"Are you a United
States resident?"
"What country are you from?"
"What is your address?"
Insurance and Driver License
Before giving you a
price, they will then ask if you would like insurance or if you have insurance.
The price varies. Last time I checked it was approximately $15 a day for
insurance.
"Would you like insurance on the car?"
"How much is insurance?"
They will also ask who is going to be the driver.
"Who is going to be the driver?"
"How many people are going to drive?"
"Are all the drivers at least 25 years old?"
You will have to provide a driver's license. If you are from a different country then you should at least have an international driver's license prepared from your country.
"Can I see your driver's license?"
"May I have your driver's license?"
"I will need to see your driver's license."
"Would you like insurance on the car?"
"How much is insurance?"
They will also ask who is going to be the driver.
"Who is going to be the driver?"
"How many people are going to drive?"
"Are all the drivers at least 25 years old?"
You will have to provide a driver's license. If you are from a different country then you should at least have an international driver's license prepared from your country.
"Can I see your driver's license?"
"May I have your driver's license?"
"I will need to see your driver's license."
Price and
Rules
Finally, they will tell
you the price and you will have to pay with a credit card.
"The total will be $184.19."
At this time, you can give them your credit card.
After you pay, they will tell you some rules.
"The gas tank is full. You should fill it up before you return the car. If you do not, then we charge $3 a gallon."
"You can pick up your car downstairs. Just show them the invoice and they will have your car ready for you."
"You will need to return it by 4pm on the 16th. We charge an additional $8 for every four hours that you are late. Return it to the same place you pick up the car."
"Please keep this form in the car. Bring it with you when you return the vehicle."
The price of $8 is just an example. Make sure you find out if you are not sure you will be late or not.
"How much do you charge if I am an hour late?"
"The total will be $184.19."
At this time, you can give them your credit card.
After you pay, they will tell you some rules.
"The gas tank is full. You should fill it up before you return the car. If you do not, then we charge $3 a gallon."
"You can pick up your car downstairs. Just show them the invoice and they will have your car ready for you."
"You will need to return it by 4pm on the 16th. We charge an additional $8 for every four hours that you are late. Return it to the same place you pick up the car."
"Please keep this form in the car. Bring it with you when you return the vehicle."
The price of $8 is just an example. Make sure you find out if you are not sure you will be late or not.
"How much do you charge if I am an hour late?"
Making a Reservation
You will be calling the
company you are renting from. When you call, you should verify if the rental
car company has a location at the airport you are flying into.
"I need one at Los Angeles Airport."
"I am flying into Los Angeles Airport."
If they have one, they will say they do and start asking you similar questions we already covered. We will not repeat them here, but I will have a practice session giving an example dialog on making a reservation below.
They might ask you for a credit card number on the phone. If you don't call and cancel, you might be charged. So if you need to cancel, remember to call and cancel at least 24 hours before the date. I am not sure if it is 24 hours. You should ask and verify.
"If I need to cancel, when should I do that by?"
"As soon as possible, but in order to avoid a charge you should call 24 hours before the date."
When you arrive at the counter, you will tell the person that you have a reservation.
"Hi, I have a reservation under last name Lee."
"Hi, I have a reservation for a midsize car."
After that, they will confirm your information. They might ask you some duplicate questions, but we should have covered most of it already.
"I need one at Los Angeles Airport."
"I am flying into Los Angeles Airport."
If they have one, they will say they do and start asking you similar questions we already covered. We will not repeat them here, but I will have a practice session giving an example dialog on making a reservation below.
They might ask you for a credit card number on the phone. If you don't call and cancel, you might be charged. So if you need to cancel, remember to call and cancel at least 24 hours before the date. I am not sure if it is 24 hours. You should ask and verify.
"If I need to cancel, when should I do that by?"
"As soon as possible, but in order to avoid a charge you should call 24 hours before the date."
When you arrive at the counter, you will tell the person that you have a reservation.
"Hi, I have a reservation under last name Lee."
"Hi, I have a reservation for a midsize car."
After that, they will confirm your information. They might ask you some duplicate questions, but we should have covered most of it already.
Car Rental - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hello, ABC Car
Rental. How can I help you?"
B: "Hi, I wanted
to make a reservation."
A: "What location
would you like to rent from?"
B: "I am flying
into Los Angeles Airport . Do you have a booth
there?"
A: "Yes we do.
What date are you flying in?"
B: "I am arriving
on June 22nd."
A: "What time is
your arrival time?"
B: "I am scheduled
to arrive at 2 pm."
A: "How long would
you like to rent the vehicle?"
B: "I will need it
for 10 days."
A: "What size car
would you like?"
B: "A midsize car
please."
A: "Can I get your
name?"
B: "Yes. My name
is Sang Min Lee."
A: "Can you spell
that?"
B: "Last name is L
E E. First name is S A N G. Middle initial is M."
A: "Great. Thank
you. I have reserved a midsize car for you for June 22nd until July 1st. Is
there anything else I can help you with?"
B: "That will be
all."
A: "Thank you for
calling."
B: "Thank you.
Bye."
2
A: "How can I help
you today?"
B: "I would like
to rent a car."
A: "Do you have a
reservation?"
B: "No."
A: "That's
alright. Let's see what we can find. We have several cars to choose from. What
size are you looking for?"
B: "What are my
options?"
A: "A compact car,
midsize car, and a minivan."
B: "How much are
they?"
A: "Compact is
$2.1.95 a day, midsize is $27.95 a day, and a minivan is 35.95 a day."
B: "I'll take a
midsize car."
A: "How long will
you be renting the car?"
B: "One
week."
A: "How many
people will be driving the car?"
B: "Just
myself."
A: "Would you like
insurance?"
B: "How much is
it?"
A: "It is $14.95 a
day and it covers everything regardless of fault."
B: "Yes
please."
A: "Can I have
your name?"
B: "Last name is
Lee. L E E. First name is Sang. S A N G."
A: "You address
please?"
B: "I am from Korea . Would
you like my address in Korea ?"
A: "Just the city
name."
B: "Seoul , Korea ."
A: "Can I see your
driver's license and a credit card?"
B: "Sure. Here it
is."
A: "Great. That
will be $324.92. Would you like me to charge it on this card?"
B: "Yes. That will
be fine."
A: "Please sign
here. You can pick up your car downstairs. Your expected time to return the car
is June 29th. That is exactly one week. Show the attendant this invoice. When
you return the car, bring this invoice with you. Also, the gas tank is full,
you should fill up the gas tank before you return. If you don't want to, we can
do it for $3 a gallon. Is there anything else I can do for you?"
B: "That will be
all. Thank you."
A: "Thank you.
Good bye."
Making a Reservation I
It is not common to go
to a hotel without a reservation so I will only cover the reservation aspect.
Along with reserving a room, I will cover checking in, checking out, room
service, and wake up call.
Making
a Reservation
When you make a
reservation, call them and tell them you want to reserve a room. Or, you can
start by asking them for a price.
"Hi, how much are your rooms?"
"Hi, what are your rates?"
"Hello, how much is a room?"
"Our rooms start at $79 for a basic room."
"Our rooms start at $79 for a standard room and go up to $300 for a
suite."
"Ok. Can I reserve a room?"
"Hi, I would like to reserve a room."
"Hello, can I reserve a couple of rooms?"
The first thing they
usually ask is the dates you want the room and the duration.
"What day do you want to check in?"
"Which date did you want to reserve?"
"What date are you looking for?"
"I want a room from June 22nd to June 25th."
"I would like a room for the 19th of July."
"How long will you be staying with us?"
"When will you be checking out?"
"How many days would you like the room for?"
"I am going to stay for 3 days."
"I would like to reserve the room for 4 days."
"I am going to need the room until July 23rd."
Making a
Reservation II
The next series of
questions covers how many people and how many rooms. Some hotels charge by
number of rooms and number of adults, and some hotels charge by number of rooms
only.
"How many rooms will you need?"
"Is this for only one room?"
"How many rooms would you like to reserve?"
"How many rooms should I reserve for you?"
"I will only need one room."
"I am going to need two rooms."
"How many adults will be in your party?"
"How many total children will be with you?"
"Just two adults."
"A total of four adults."
"I will be alone."
"A total of 2 adults and 2 children."
"One adult and 2 children."
"How many rooms will you need?"
"Is this for only one room?"
"How many rooms would you like to reserve?"
"How many rooms should I reserve for you?"
"I will only need one room."
"I am going to need two rooms."
"How many adults will be in your party?"
"How many total children will be with you?"
"Just two adults."
"A total of four adults."
"I will be alone."
"A total of 2 adults and 2 children."
"One adult and 2 children."
Making a Reservation III
After they determine how
many rooms and how many total people, they will ask you what type of bed you
want.
"Would you like a single king size bed, or two double size beds in the room?"
"Will a single king size bed be ok?"
"We only have a room with two double size beds. Will that be ok?"
"Do you want a smoking room or a non smoking room?"
"Do you prefer a smoking or non smoking room?"
"I would like a smoking room."
"Can I have a non smoking room?"
"Either is fine."
"I don't have a preference."
You will have to provide your credit card number to reserve the room.
"Can I get a credit card number?"
"Can I have your credit card number?"
"What is your credit card number?"
Finally, they will repeat all the information back to you.
"Ok, Mr. Lee. I have one smoking room reserved for July 19th till July 22nd. The total comes to $256.78 after tax. If you need to cancel, please call us 24 hours before July 19th. Can I help you with anything else?"
"Would you like a single king size bed, or two double size beds in the room?"
"Will a single king size bed be ok?"
"We only have a room with two double size beds. Will that be ok?"
"Do you want a smoking room or a non smoking room?"
"Do you prefer a smoking or non smoking room?"
"I would like a smoking room."
"Can I have a non smoking room?"
"Either is fine."
"I don't have a preference."
You will have to provide your credit card number to reserve the room.
"Can I get a credit card number?"
"Can I have your credit card number?"
"What is your credit card number?"
Finally, they will repeat all the information back to you.
"Ok, Mr. Lee. I have one smoking room reserved for July 19th till July 22nd. The total comes to $256.78 after tax. If you need to cancel, please call us 24 hours before July 19th. Can I help you with anything else?"
Checking In and Checking Out
Checking in is pretty
simple, you just need to go to the counter and say that you are checking in.
"Hi, I am checking in."
"Hi, I have a reservation and I am checking in."
They will ask you for your credit card and a photo ID. They might confirm your information and you should receive your keys. Here are some questions to ask during this time.
"Where is the elevator?"
"Do you have concierge service here?"
"Do you have a map of the city?"
"What time should I check out by?"
"What time is check out?"
Checking out is just as simple. You go to the counter and say, "I am checking out." At this time, you should return the keys. They might ask you to sign something or ask you if the credit card on file is ok to charge.
"Should we charge the credit card on file or did you want to use a different card?"
"Your credit card will be charged a total of $256.78. Can you sign on the bottom?"
"Thank you for staying with us. We look forward to seeing you again."
"Hi, I am checking in."
"Hi, I have a reservation and I am checking in."
They will ask you for your credit card and a photo ID. They might confirm your information and you should receive your keys. Here are some questions to ask during this time.
"Where is the elevator?"
"Do you have concierge service here?"
"Do you have a map of the city?"
"What time should I check out by?"
"What time is check out?"
Checking out is just as simple. You go to the counter and say, "I am checking out." At this time, you should return the keys. They might ask you to sign something or ask you if the credit card on file is ok to charge.
"Should we charge the credit card on file or did you want to use a different card?"
"Your credit card will be charged a total of $256.78. Can you sign on the bottom?"
"Thank you for staying with us. We look forward to seeing you again."
General Things
If you need a wake up
call, you can call the front desk.
"Can I have a wake up call?"
"What time would you like your wake up call?"
"At 7:30 am please."
Room service is available but they have hours of operation. The menu in the room should indicate what times they serve hot food, and the menu will show a list of items that are available 24 hours a day. If you can't find the times, you can ask the front desk.
"What are the hours for room service?"
"They serve hot food from 5:30am to 11:00pm. They also have a list of items you can select from during off hours."
If you need help with your luggage, the person that does this is called a bellman, a bellhop, or a bellboy. The most common term is a bellman so I will use that terminology here.
The person that gives advice on city activities, recreation, places to dine, and general questions is called a concierge.
If a person parks the car for you, they are called a valet.
Regular motels and inns might not have these additional services. Even some hotels do not have them. But if you are staying at a nice hotel, you can ask for them.
"Do you have a bellman here?"
"Do you have a concierge?"
Only some hotels have valet service. If someone parked the car for you and you can't find someone, you can ask someone else the following questions.
"Where is the valet attendant?"
"Can you get someone to get my car?"
Remember that if you use these premium services, you should tip. Also remember that you might not know they are helping you. For example, when you check in, a person might ask if you need help with your bags. If you say yes, then you are using the bellman services. So remember to tip if you do. If you don't want to tip, you don't have to, but it is a little rude. Finally, if you don't want any help, just tell them, "No thank you."
"Can I have a wake up call?"
"What time would you like your wake up call?"
"At 7:30 am please."
Room service is available but they have hours of operation. The menu in the room should indicate what times they serve hot food, and the menu will show a list of items that are available 24 hours a day. If you can't find the times, you can ask the front desk.
"What are the hours for room service?"
"They serve hot food from 5:30am to 11:00pm. They also have a list of items you can select from during off hours."
If you need help with your luggage, the person that does this is called a bellman, a bellhop, or a bellboy. The most common term is a bellman so I will use that terminology here.
The person that gives advice on city activities, recreation, places to dine, and general questions is called a concierge.
If a person parks the car for you, they are called a valet.
Regular motels and inns might not have these additional services. Even some hotels do not have them. But if you are staying at a nice hotel, you can ask for them.
"Do you have a bellman here?"
"Do you have a concierge?"
Only some hotels have valet service. If someone parked the car for you and you can't find someone, you can ask someone else the following questions.
"Where is the valet attendant?"
"Can you get someone to get my car?"
Remember that if you use these premium services, you should tip. Also remember that you might not know they are helping you. For example, when you check in, a person might ask if you need help with your bags. If you say yes, then you are using the bellman services. So remember to tip if you do. If you don't want to tip, you don't have to, but it is a little rude. Finally, if you don't want any help, just tell them, "No thank you."
Hotel Checking In - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Thank you for
calling Great Hotel. How may I help you?"
B: "I would like
to rent a room, but how much do you charge a night?"
A: "Our prices
start at $79 a night for a standard room."
B: "Great. Can you
reserve a room for me?"
A: "Sure. What day
are you coming in?"
B: "I will be
checking in on August 3rd."
A: "How many days
do you need the room for?"
B: "I'll need it
for three nights."
A: "Ok. I have you
coming in on the 3rd of August and checking out on the 6th. Is that
correct?"
B: "Yes."
A: "How many total
adults?"
B: "Two adults and
two kids."
A: "How old are
the children?"
B: "10 and
12."
A: "Would you like
one room or two rooms?"
B: "Just one is
fine."
A: "Would you like
a smoking room or a non smoking room?"
B: "Non smoking
room please."
A: "Can I have
your last name?"
B: "Park."
A: "Your first
name"
B: "Young. That's
Y O U N G."
A: "Let me confirm
your information Mr. Park. I have one non smoking double room with 2 adults and
2 children from August 3rd to August 6th. Is this correct?"
B: "Yes."
A: "The total
comes to $256.78. Can I get your credit card number?"
B: "Sure. It is
444444444444."
A: "What is the
name on the credit card?"
B: "Young Park ."
A: "I have the
room reserved for you. If you need to cancel, please call us 24 hours before
your check in date. Failure to cancel will result in a one day charge on your
credit card. Is there anything else I can do for you?"
B: "Yes, one more
question. What time can we check in."
A: "We can check
you in by 2:00pm."
B: "Great. Thank
you."
A: "Thank you and
have a great day."
B: "Thanks.
Bye"
A: "Good
bye."
Talking to Co-Workers
What ever company you
work for, you will have a boss or a manager. If you are a manager, you will
have directs reporting to you. And in most cases, you will have to work with
co-workers. This lesson will cover the English you need to know to speak to
co-workers. I will also have a lesson on talking to the manager and
subordinates.
When you talk with a co-worker, most of it is small talk. You can talk about your background, what school you attended, your major, and your previous work experience. So studying the English lessons along side the business section will help you for your daily English needs. However, I'll have some sentences you can use when you are talking with a co-worker.
If you miss a meeting, then you will need to ask a co-worker what happened during the meeting.
"I missed the meeting. Can you fill me in?"
"I had a doctor's appointment so I missed the meeting. What happened?"
"I couldn't make it to the meeting today. Anything interesting I should know about?"
"I missed the meeting. Was there anything new?"
Another time you talk with a co-worker is if the boss is mad or you don't like the boss. But whenever you talk about bad things with co-workers, make sure you are talking to a friend. If that person is not a friend, then they might tell your manager what you said.
"Matt looks pretty upset right now. Do you know what's going on?"
"Did something happen recently? Matt looks pissed off."
"I think Matt is mad about something. Do you know what it could be?"
Or if the manager only treats you bad, then you can ask your co-worker/friend if the manager treats them differently or the same.
"Matt talks to me like he is mad all the time. Does he do that to you?"
"Does Matt talk to you like he is upset? Or is it just me?"
"It's not you at all. He talks to me that way too."
"Matt is way too moody."
"If he knew what he was doing, we wouldn't be in this mess."
"What is wrong with Matt these days?"
"He is having one of those days again. I think his manager just gave him a hard time."
"What do you think about our manager?"
"He gets too mad easily and he doesn't really help us out that much. What do you think?"
When you talk with a co-worker, most of it is small talk. You can talk about your background, what school you attended, your major, and your previous work experience. So studying the English lessons along side the business section will help you for your daily English needs. However, I'll have some sentences you can use when you are talking with a co-worker.
If you miss a meeting, then you will need to ask a co-worker what happened during the meeting.
"I missed the meeting. Can you fill me in?"
"I had a doctor's appointment so I missed the meeting. What happened?"
"I couldn't make it to the meeting today. Anything interesting I should know about?"
"I missed the meeting. Was there anything new?"
Another time you talk with a co-worker is if the boss is mad or you don't like the boss. But whenever you talk about bad things with co-workers, make sure you are talking to a friend. If that person is not a friend, then they might tell your manager what you said.
"Matt looks pretty upset right now. Do you know what's going on?"
"Did something happen recently? Matt looks pissed off."
"I think Matt is mad about something. Do you know what it could be?"
Or if the manager only treats you bad, then you can ask your co-worker/friend if the manager treats them differently or the same.
"Matt talks to me like he is mad all the time. Does he do that to you?"
"Does Matt talk to you like he is upset? Or is it just me?"
"It's not you at all. He talks to me that way too."
"Matt is way too moody."
"If he knew what he was doing, we wouldn't be in this mess."
"What is wrong with Matt these days?"
"He is having one of those days again. I think his manager just gave him a hard time."
"What do you think about our manager?"
"He gets too mad easily and he doesn't really help us out that much. What do you think?"
Asking for help or offering help
When you offer to help
someone, you are asking your co-worker if they want to give you some of their
work. Here are a couple of ways you can offer some help.
"I finished my project already so I have extra bandwidth. Let me know if you need help with anything."
Bandwidth is usually used as a networking terminology. But in this context, it means having extra time.
"You're doing the analysis on ABC Company? I did that last year. If you need any help, just let me know."
"I'm pretty familiar with your project so if you have any questions, feel free to ask me."
Asking for help is a little more difficult. You will have to see what the work environment is like and what type of relationship you have with your co-workers.
"I'm having trouble implementing Plan A on ABC Company. Can you look at my work and see if I am missing a step?"
"Can you help me analyze the finance data? This is my first time and I don't want to screw it up."
"Do you have a few minutes to help me with the data migration tool? I can't figure it out."
"I finished my project already so I have extra bandwidth. Let me know if you need help with anything."
Bandwidth is usually used as a networking terminology. But in this context, it means having extra time.
"You're doing the analysis on ABC Company? I did that last year. If you need any help, just let me know."
"I'm pretty familiar with your project so if you have any questions, feel free to ask me."
Asking for help is a little more difficult. You will have to see what the work environment is like and what type of relationship you have with your co-workers.
"I'm having trouble implementing Plan A on ABC Company. Can you look at my work and see if I am missing a step?"
"Can you help me analyze the finance data? This is my first time and I don't want to screw it up."
"Do you have a few minutes to help me with the data migration tool? I can't figure it out."
Complaining
about another co-worker to a co-worker
I remember in my first
job, I had a co-worker I really didn't like. He was a nice guy, but he was a
complete idiot. To vent out my frustration, I talked with some closer
co-workers about my problems with him. Here are some of the things I said. You
might be in a similar situation of dealing with a complete idiot.
"Have you worked with Jake yet? He can't do anything right."
"The problem with Jake is that he doesn't know that he is an idiot."
"I remember helping Jake out so much, and then he stabs my back."
"I don't think he does his own work. He goes around asking everyone to do a portion of his work and says he did it all."
"Have you worked with Jake yet? He can't do anything right."
"The problem with Jake is that he doesn't know that he is an idiot."
"I remember helping Jake out so much, and then he stabs my back."
"I don't think he does his own work. He goes around asking everyone to do a portion of his work and says he did it all."
"If you have to work with Jake, remember the things I told you."
"Is management blind or am I being too sensitive about this?"
"I think the manager likes him because he kisses her ass all day long."
Kissing ass refers to butt kiss and brown nosing. Basically, a person who butt kisses is a person always saying good things to the manager, giving compliments, showing off in front of the manager, and doing anything possible to look good.
"The manager is blind because he is a total brown-noser."
"I can't believe this company is paying $75,000 a year for this fool."
Complaining about the company
As I already said
previously, make sure you are careful who you talk to when you are complaining
about anything such as the company.
"This is a dead end job. I don't see much of a future here."
"I hate the redundancy. It's so boring."
"Work isn't exciting for me anymore. I am doing the same thing over and over again."
"This company doesn't care about employees that much. I haven't received a fair raise in 3 years."
"I don't know if it is my manager or this company, but I'm really getting sick of my job."
"What do you think about all the politics in this company?"
"The politics suck here. But it is the same for any large corporation. The best way to deal with it is to take advantage of the rules."
I heard in some countries that switching companies is not common. Once you have a decent job in a decent company, the person usually works there all their life. In the States however, changing jobs and changing companies is very common. That makes it a common discussion to have with friends and co-workers.
"I don't know how much longer I can take this job. I've been thinking about applying to a different company."
"Have you ever thought about leaving this company?"
"What company do you want to switch to?"
"I started applying for other jobs. There are a lot of positions open."
"I've been looking for jobs on monster.com. They have a lot of positions available."
"This is a dead end job. I don't see much of a future here."
"I hate the redundancy. It's so boring."
"Work isn't exciting for me anymore. I am doing the same thing over and over again."
"This company doesn't care about employees that much. I haven't received a fair raise in 3 years."
"I don't know if it is my manager or this company, but I'm really getting sick of my job."
"What do you think about all the politics in this company?"
"The politics suck here. But it is the same for any large corporation. The best way to deal with it is to take advantage of the rules."
I heard in some countries that switching companies is not common. Once you have a decent job in a decent company, the person usually works there all their life. In the States however, changing jobs and changing companies is very common. That makes it a common discussion to have with friends and co-workers.
"I don't know how much longer I can take this job. I've been thinking about applying to a different company."
"Have you ever thought about leaving this company?"
"What company do you want to switch to?"
"I started applying for other jobs. There are a lot of positions open."
"I've been looking for jobs on monster.com. They have a lot of positions available."
Talking about work experience
I won't cover topics we
have in our regular English lessons, but talking about work experience is not a
separate topic I have, so let's spend a few minutes here.
When you are talking to a co-worker, you can talk about many different things. One of the topics might be previous work experience. Whenever you receive this question, the easiest way to answer this is to say where you worked and what you did.
"What did you do before working here?"
"I worked at ABC Company. I was a market analyst researching what the user wants in portable devices."
"I was over in the sales department on the second floor. I was in charge of overseeing the sales made by all the sales associates each month."
"I was a software engineer at Sun Microsystems. I created internal tools using Java to help automate the recruiting process."
When you are talking to a co-worker, you can talk about many different things. One of the topics might be previous work experience. Whenever you receive this question, the easiest way to answer this is to say where you worked and what you did.
"What did you do before working here?"
"I worked at ABC Company. I was a market analyst researching what the user wants in portable devices."
"I was over in the sales department on the second floor. I was in charge of overseeing the sales made by all the sales associates each month."
"I was a software engineer at Sun Microsystems. I created internal tools using Java to help automate the recruiting process."
Talking to CoWorkers - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hey Jack. How
is your day going?"
B: "Just finishing
the project. Other than that, not much. How about you?"
A: "I'm just about
finished for the day. I have one more task to do, but I wanted to take a break
first."
B: "Did you have
to work with Jake on that project?"
A: "Unfortunately,
yes."
B: "Oh my gosh. I
feel so sorry for you."
A: "Don't remind
me. I'm just glad it's over."
B: "Yeah. I
remember when I worked on the data conversion tool with him. Everything he did,
I had to re-do. It would have been faster if I did it alone."
A: "That's exactly
what happened to me. It took me longer because I had to re-do everything he
did. That really pissed me off."
B: "Next time the
manager wants me to do a project with him, I'm going to tell him that I will do
it myself."
A: "That's a good
idea. Hopefully, the manager will realize how useless he is."
B: "Exactly. If
you're not busy, you can do my work."
A: "Ha ha. I got
enough to do."
B: "Yeah. I'm just
kidding."
A: "Aright dude. I
better finish my work. I'll talk to you later."
2
A: "Hey Jordan , did you
go to the team meeting this morning?"
B: "Yeah. The
manager presented a new project to us that we'll have to do."
A: "Damn it. I
shouldn't have missed that meeting, but I was stuck in another meeting. What
else did you guys talk about?"
B: "Everything
else was the same. We talked about progress of current assignments, due dates,
about hiring another worker, that's all."
A: "What's the new
project about?"
B: "It's hard to
explain. She sent out mail to all of us. You can just review the document she
sent out."
A: "Ok. I'll do
that."
3
A: "Hey Bob, do
you have a few minutes?"
B: "Sure. What's
up?"
A: "I'm having
problems with my computer. I don't know what's wrong with it."
B: "Let's go take
a look at it. Oh. Here is the problem. You have a boot sector virus. Install
the anti-virus software. That should take care of the problem."
A: "Great thanks.
4
A: "How is your
day going?"
B: "The same as
usual. How about you?"
A: "Me too. I'm
getting sick of work man."
B: "I'm already
past that stage."
A: "What are you
still doing here then?"
B: "It pays the
bills."
A: "Why don't you
find another job?"
B: "Well, I
thought about it, but if I put in two more years, then I get a good pension. I
can't give that up. Anyway, this job is boring, but at least it's easy."
A: "Well, you've
been here for eight years. You have some things to stay for. I've only been
here for two years. I can't see myself doing this for another two years. I want
to gain more experience in other areas."
B: "Have you
brought this up to the boss? Maybe you can go into management."
A: "They usually
want a person with an MBA degree or a person willing to put in 80 hours a
week."
B: "That's what it
takes man. Either this or that."
A: "Yeah. I better
think about what I want. Why didn't you go into management?"
B: "It would have
taken too much time. I have a family that I want to spend time with, so it
wasn't worth it for me. But you're single. You can put in a few good years and
put yourself in a good position before thinking about settling down."
A: "You have a
point. I'll see what my options are. Hopefully the manager will help me out
with my career."
B: "She's pretty
cool about that. Just be honest with her and she'll show you some doors."
A: "That sounds
good. Thanks for the advice."
B: "No problem.
Good luck."
Talking
to the Boss
Unless you are the
owner of the company, you will have a boss. This lesson will cover all English
you need to know to express what you want to say to your boss. This will
include asking for feedback, explanation, showing frustration, asking for more
work, and more.
If you are doing a project and you want your manager to review it before submitting it, then you can ask the manager in several ways.
"Did you want to review my project?"
"I just completed the assignment. Did you want to review it?"
"This is my first project and I was wondering if you could review it real quick?"
"I think I covered all the bases, but could you do a quick check."
If you are new at your job, then it is good to ask for feedback. This can be done when you complete a project or after several months on the job. Some companies have a process in place where you have a weekly one on one meeting with your manager. You can use this time to talk about your work and anything else on your mind. If you don't have a weekly meeting, then you might have to set up a time with your manager to discuss your progress.
"Hi Roger, can we set up a time to discuss my progress so far?"
"I was wondering if we can meet to discuss how I am doing."
If you are doing work that doesn't include projects or assignments, then you can't ask for feedback on the work you completed. But you can ask how you have been doing in the last several months.
"Can I get some feedback on my performance?"
"Where do you think I need to improve?"
"What areas do you think I should work on?"
If you have a project you completed, you can ask for feedback on the project. But make sure you give your manager enough time to review the work before asking for feedback.
"Did you finish reviewing my project I completed?"
"Hi Mark, this was my first project, and I wanted to know how I did so I can improve."
"Where do you think I could have done better?"
"Is there any areas that I could have done better?"
"What should I do better for next time?"
"What areas did I do well, and what areas did I do poorly."
If you are doing a project and you want your manager to review it before submitting it, then you can ask the manager in several ways.
"Did you want to review my project?"
"I just completed the assignment. Did you want to review it?"
"This is my first project and I was wondering if you could review it real quick?"
"I think I covered all the bases, but could you do a quick check."
If you are new at your job, then it is good to ask for feedback. This can be done when you complete a project or after several months on the job. Some companies have a process in place where you have a weekly one on one meeting with your manager. You can use this time to talk about your work and anything else on your mind. If you don't have a weekly meeting, then you might have to set up a time with your manager to discuss your progress.
"Hi Roger, can we set up a time to discuss my progress so far?"
"I was wondering if we can meet to discuss how I am doing."
If you are doing work that doesn't include projects or assignments, then you can't ask for feedback on the work you completed. But you can ask how you have been doing in the last several months.
"Can I get some feedback on my performance?"
"Where do you think I need to improve?"
"What areas do you think I should work on?"
If you have a project you completed, you can ask for feedback on the project. But make sure you give your manager enough time to review the work before asking for feedback.
"Did you finish reviewing my project I completed?"
"Hi Mark, this was my first project, and I wanted to know how I did so I can improve."
"Where do you think I could have done better?"
"Is there any areas that I could have done better?"
"What should I do better for next time?"
"What areas did I do well, and what areas did I do poorly."
Asking for more work
Most companies will
have so much work that you will never run out of things to do. But there are
times when you don't have enough to do. In this situation, you should ask your
manager to give you more work.
"Hi Mark, I finished all my weekly
duties already. Do you have more work I can do?"
"I've been completing my work early on a regular basis. Can I have
more responsibilities?"
"I have a lot of extra time. I usually double check all my work,
but that doesn't take much time. Is there any additional work I can do?"
Although asking for
more work is a good sign of being productive, there is actually something
better. Instead of asking for more work, find the extra work without asking.
After you find something to do, then tell your manager that you want to do the
work.
"I had extra time on my hands so I started investigating the
network problem. If you don't mind, I would like to work on this project to
help the office productivity around here."
If you are a manager,
would you want someone asking you what to do, or would you prefer a worker who
found a problem and wants to fix it. I have had people ask me for more work and
it is stressful trying to think of something. I am busy and don't have that
much time to find extra work. If a worker identifies more work to do, then I
would appreciate it that much more.
"I have been completing my work a day early every week. I know the
reference material has been sitting there for some time. Would you like me to
do that project, or did you want to assign another project to me?"
Although having extra
time to do more work is a good situation to be in, there might be times when
you have too much work. Here are a couple of sentences to ask for help.
"Hi Mark, the addition we made to the project made it difficult to
complete by myself. If the deadline doesn't change, I will need some help to
complete it. Can you assign someone to help me out?"
"I have spent every minute on this project
and have been putting in serious overtime. This project is a lot bigger than we
anticipated. I am going to need some help to complete it on time. Do you have
anyone available to help me?"
"The Alpha project has been eating so much of my time that I didn't
have much time to work on the Beta project. Is there anyone with extra
bandwidth to help me finish the Beta project?"
Complaining and Showing
Frustration
Showing frustration is
ok if you do it right. If you are frustrated and you start complaining, then
the manager will either think you are not capable of doing your work, or the
manager will realize that you have way too much work. So it is important how
you complain and how you show your frustration.
Showing frustration because of your mistake is ok to do. It shows that you are upset at yourself and that you can't believe you made a mistake. So it is indicating to the manager that you are not going to screw up again. Hopefully you won't screw anything up, but just in case, here are some ways to show your frustration.
"I can't believe I messed that up. I don't think I am stupid, but this is suggesting otherwise."
"I am so frustrated at myself. How did I not catch that?"
Complaining about someone else is not good. But if you are so frustrated and you have to tell your manager, take a deep breath, calm yourself down, and say something like my example as calmly as you can.
"It's frustrating working with Tim. I'm doing everything I can to help and I am trying to be understanding, but he is slowing our project down immensely."
The best kind of frustration is when the manager knows exactly what you are talking about. If the manager is frustrated as well, then he or she will completely understand. An example of this is when you are working with another company and they are not doing their work properly.
"I'm having a hard time working with ABC Company. They are always late and the work they do has numerous errors. It is really frustrating because I have to spend a great deal of time proof reading the material. I recommend not giving ABC Company any more work."
Showing frustration because of your mistake is ok to do. It shows that you are upset at yourself and that you can't believe you made a mistake. So it is indicating to the manager that you are not going to screw up again. Hopefully you won't screw anything up, but just in case, here are some ways to show your frustration.
"I can't believe I messed that up. I don't think I am stupid, but this is suggesting otherwise."
"I am so frustrated at myself. How did I not catch that?"
Complaining about someone else is not good. But if you are so frustrated and you have to tell your manager, take a deep breath, calm yourself down, and say something like my example as calmly as you can.
"It's frustrating working with Tim. I'm doing everything I can to help and I am trying to be understanding, but he is slowing our project down immensely."
The best kind of frustration is when the manager knows exactly what you are talking about. If the manager is frustrated as well, then he or she will completely understand. An example of this is when you are working with another company and they are not doing their work properly.
"I'm having a hard time working with ABC Company. They are always late and the work they do has numerous errors. It is really frustrating because I have to spend a great deal of time proof reading the material. I recommend not giving ABC Company any more work."
Talking to your boss about another boss
Sometimes there are
multiple bosses and they both give you work. This can cause some problems. The
best way to handle this situation is to tell your direct boss what is happening
so it gets straightened out at the management level.
"Hey Mark. I'm doing all the projects you gave me, but John gives me additional work. I don't mind it, but lately it's been too much."
"Hey Mark. John has been assigning a lot of work to me. I have a lot of current work I am doing, so I would like to know what work has more priority."
"John wants me to do the payroll analysis. He said he needs it by end of week. But didn't you want the employee headcount finished by Friday? I can't finish both. What should I do first?"
"Hey Mark. I'm doing all the projects you gave me, but John gives me additional work. I don't mind it, but lately it's been too much."
"Hey Mark. John has been assigning a lot of work to me. I have a lot of current work I am doing, so I would like to know what work has more priority."
"John wants me to do the payroll analysis. He said he needs it by end of week. But didn't you want the employee headcount finished by Friday? I can't finish both. What should I do first?"
If another boss is giving you a hard time, you can tell your manager what you think. Here are some professional sentences that you can use to show your frustration about another boss.
"I'm having some problems with John lately. He is very critical and puts me down in public. I don't know what I am doing wrong so I don't know where I need to improve. What do you think I should do about this?"
"John has been very difficult to work with. He is very bossy and expects everything to be done his way. I have been tolerating it because he is a manager, but some of his methods are wasting a lot of time. I always suggest other ways, but he will not hear me out."
Talking to the Boss - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hi Matt, I
finished the assignment on the documents. Did you get a chance to review
them?"
B: "Yeah. I
already reviewed them. It was pretty good."
A: "Since it was
my first project, I was wondering if I can get some feedback."
B: "Well, you
finished the project on time. And seeing how it was your first assignment, you
did very well."
A: "Thanks. If it
wasn't my first assignment, where do you think I need to improve?"
B: "That's a fair
question... I think you could have spent a little more time documenting the
difference between Process A and Process B. You showed a lot of the
similarities, but lacking a little on the differences."
A: "I'll keep that
in mind. How about the structure? I changed the template a little because I
wanted to add a section for recommendation."
B: "I liked the
addition. Usually people just enter it into the comment section on the bottom
but having a clear section makes it stand out. That was good."
A: "Was there
anything else? I like to get feedback early so I can improve."
B: "No problem.
Everything else on the assignment was great. The only other tip I can give you
is sending me more updates. If I knew you were stuck on section C for a while,
I could have saved you a lot of time. So keep me aware on your status."
A: "That makes
sense. I'll do that. Thanks for the feedback."
B: "Don't mention
it. And good job on the assignment."
A: "Thanks."
2
A: "Hi Mark. I
completed Project A and didn't have anything else to work on. Should I find
something to do, or did you have something lined up?"
B: "I won't have
another assignment for you until next Monday. What will you be doing until
then?"
A: "I'm not sure,
I was thinking about investigating the reporting issue we are having, but that's
a low priority now. But if there is nothing else to do, it might be good to
finally fix that."
B: "How about
John. He told me that he needed a little help on Project C. Why don't you ask
him if he still needs help. If not, then check out the reporting issue."
A: "John? I've
been meaning to talk to you about him."
B: "What's the
problem?"
A: "I don't want
to be out of line, but he's very difficult to work with. He looks over my
shoulder all the time and doesn't like how I am doing things."
B: "Yeah. He is like
that. I appreciate your feedback, and you are not the first to bring this up.
Although he is difficult, he does get a lot of work done around here."
A: "I completely
agree, and I will continue to work with him as well as I can. I just thought I
should let you know instead of keeping it bottled up."
B: "I appreciate
your honesty. But for now, you're going to have to tolerate his methods a
little longer. I'll see if the director is willing to have a talk with John
about this problem."
A: "Ok. Well, I'll
go see what type of help John needs. If there is nothing, I'll work on the
reporting problem. Either way, I'll send you an email letting you know what I
am working on."
B: "That would be
perfect. Thanks."
A: "Thanks. I'll
talk to you later."
B: "Ok. Bye."
Talking to your Subordinate or Direct
If you are a manager,
then you will more likely have someone reporting to you. The most common
terminology I am used to is a direct. Throughout this lesson, I will use the
word direct.
There are many things
you have to say to a direct. You have to give them work, explain things,
encourage them to do better, and even reprimand them when they are not
performing well. We will cover these types of sentences in this lesson.
Status
A common question a
manager asks is to find out what the status of a project is.
"What is the status of the marketing documents?"
"How far along are you in your analysis?"
"Are you almost done with the technical report?"
"When are you going to finish the design plans?"
"Can you give me a status on your progress so far?"
"How is the reporting assignment going?"
"When can you give me a working draft by?"
Requesting a weekly
status mail from your direct is very common among large companies with many
employees. Basically, the status mail will include what has been accomplished
the current week, and what will be done next week. If your company has this
process, or if you just want to implement it yourself, you can tell your direct
something like the following.
"At the end of every week, can you send me a weekly status mail?
I'll email you a template you should follow. You should email it to me every
Friday."
"I want you to send me a status report at the end of every week.
You should include what you did for that week and what you plan on doing for
the next week."
"Can you send me a weekly status report? If you haven't done it
before, let me know and I will send you a template to use."
Project
Change
There are times when a
project changes and you have to tell your direct to change something. Let's
work on some sentences where you do this.
"I know you have been working on the database using excel, but we
need to use SQL. Can you make the necessary changes?"
Although you don't have
to be polite to your direct, it is good practice to show directs some common
courtesy. In the sentence above, it recognizes the work that has been done so
far, instructs what needs to be changed, and politely asks if they can do it.
You should follow a similar way of asking your direct to change something.
In another scenario,
your direct might give you a report to review. If something is incorrect, or
not complete, you should tell them professionally what needs to be redone.
"Hey Jackie, I reviewed your report and there are a couple areas
you have to change. Can you double check the figures you provided in page 7,
and provide a recommendation for step 3? I would appreciate it."
This example is a
little more firm, but still polite. It states that changes are required, it
then asks if two things can be changed, and finally, adds a good comment about
appreciating the work.
Finally, your direct
could be doing something on a regular basis that you don't like. As a manager,
you should tolerate things that do not affect the work, but if there is
something that is work related, it is your responsibility to tell that person.
Let's use an example where a person has a habit of talking before someone
finishes.
"John, when we are discussing something in meetings or small
groups, I noticed that you don't allow the other person to complete their
sentences. I do appreciate your contributions, but I think you should always
hear the other person out. Can you try to do that?"
Adding a simple phrase
like appreciating the contribution can make a huge difference when giving
criticism. There is a great chance the direct will be offended or upset. But if
you add a small compliment in there, the chances of the direct accepting your
criticism will be that much greater.
Deadline
Deadlines and due dates
are common among projects and assignments. Sometimes the deadline changes or
your direct needs a reminder. In any case, you should know some sentences how
to convey the deadline.
"Here is your new project. You have two weeks to complete it. After you review the project, let me know if there will be any problems."
"You have until the end of this month to complete your assignment. It is critical that everyone completes on time."
"We have two more days to complete the test pass. If anyone cannot complete their portion on time, let me know as soon as possible."
"We are not required to send in our analysis until Wednesday, so you have a couple more days to complete it."
"Do you think you can finish the marketing report by Friday?"
"Our deadline is fast approaching. I try to minimize weekend work, but we might have to work this Saturday if we do not finish on Friday."
"Here is your new project. You have two weeks to complete it. After you review the project, let me know if there will be any problems."
"You have until the end of this month to complete your assignment. It is critical that everyone completes on time."
"We have two more days to complete the test pass. If anyone cannot complete their portion on time, let me know as soon as possible."
"We are not required to send in our analysis until Wednesday, so you have a couple more days to complete it."
"Do you think you can finish the marketing report by Friday?"
"Our deadline is fast approaching. I try to minimize weekend work, but we might have to work this Saturday if we do not finish on Friday."
Subordinate asking
you Questions
All directs at one time
or another asks you questions on how to do something, or asks what something
is. The average employee will usually ask you something that is obvious and you
simply tell them. Sometimes however, a smart employee asks difficult questions
that you are not sure about.
If an employee asks you
a factual question that you are not sure about, you can always refer them to
other sources.
"I'm not sure about that one. I think the information you are
looking for is in a manual I saw in the file cabinet. Why don't you check
there?"
"Do a search on Google and see if you can find the information
there."
"I think Stacy will know the answer. She is very familiar with that
topic."
If the question is more
process related where it involves an opinion, you can answer telling them what
you would do.
"I'm not sure on the exact procedure, but if I were you, I would do
the forth step before the third one."
"I don't think we ever decided on a specific way. I think it might
be better to do this before that."
These are vague
sentences, so you should fill in the details depending on your situation.
Encouraging
As a good manager, you
should encourage great workers and bad workers. Good directs need encouraging
to keep them working hard. Bad employees need encouragement to work harder.
Here are some sentences for both types.
"Hey James, I think you're doing a great job and it is not going
unnoticed."
"You're doing great. Keep up the good work."
"I told my manager about your performance. He was quite impressed.
Keep up the good work."
Directs
having difficulty
"I had a hard time on my first project too. Don't let it get you
down. I'm sure you will do better next time."
"It wasn't as bad as you think. I also saw definite improvements so
you shouldn't give up."
"Your work has been pretty good, but I really think you can do
better. You have potential and I hope you start trying a little
harder."
Reprimanding
Finally, when you have
an employee that is doing something wrong such as being late, turning in a
project late, or not performing well, it is your responsibility to let them
know.
If someone is always
late, then you don't have to ask for an excuse. If it was one time, then it is
ok, but if they are constantly late, there is no excuse for it.
"You have been late for work on a regular basis. You better start
coming to work on time."
"This is your third warning. If you are late for work again, we
will have to take more serious action on you. Is that understood?"
"Being late for work once in a while is understandable. But there
is no excuse to be coming in to work late every day. You better start coming in
on time."
When a direct doesn't
turn in a project, it's a pretty serious no-no. I would definitely be upset,
but as a good manager, I wouldn't accuse the employee without giving them a
chance to explain. Here is an example.
"The report was due last Friday. What's going on?"
This is more like a
trap question. Unless it is a life or death situation, the excuse shouldn't be
good enough. Here is a generic excuse.
"I was working on three other assignments. I just couldn't finish
them all."
This is not a good
excuse, so you can start reprimanding the employee. You gave them a chance to
explain, and since the excuse wasn't good enough, you can basically, 'let them
have it.'
"If you were not going to finish on time, at least you could have
let me know. Regardless, you knew how important this project was and you knew
about the due date. What am I going to do with you?"
"You should have at least told me that you wouldn't be able to
finish. Then I could have asked Mary to finish it. This is very irresponsible
of you. Is this going to be a continual problem in future projects?"
Talking to Directs - Interactive Practice
1
A: "John, are you
going to complete the report on time?"
B: "I am confident
that I will have it done by this Friday."
A: "How far along
are you?"
B: "I have
completed the preliminary review, analyzed the data, and I am almost done
writing the analytical review."
A: "That's great.
It looks like you are ahead of schedule. When you are done, send it to me for
review."
B: "I'll send it
to you Friday morning. That should give you a day to review it."
A: "That's great.
Keep up the good work."
2
A: "Can you give
me an update on your assignments?"
B: "Yeah. I'm
helping with the performance testing, I've met with the partners for the
integration project, and I'm finishing up the documents on the internal
tool."
A: "That's good.
Can you start sending me a weekly report? That will help me keep track of your
progress regularly."
B: "No problem. Do
you want it by the start of Monday, or do you want it Friday evening."
A: "I'm probably
not going to read it until Monday, so just send it to me by Monday
morning."
B: "What do you
want me to include in the weekly report?"
A: "Include what
you did for the week, what you're going to do for the next week, and include
any other issues you have."
B: "I'll start
doing that this week."
A: "Great.
Thanks."
3
A: "John, can I
see you in my office?"
B: "I'll be right
over."
A: "Have a seat...
I'm concerned about your performance lately. Is there something I should know
about?"
B: "I've been
pretty occupied at home. I apologize for letting it affect work. I'll
definitely pay more attention."
A: "I understand,
but I'm still having to take some heat on your work. You have been late numerous
times, your projects are not as detailed as it used to be, and you missed a
deadline last week."
B: "I am really
sorry, and I won't let it happen again. I understand that I have been
underperforming, and I will step it up."
A: "I hope so.
I'll explain it to the director. But I don't know how much more he will
tolerate. That's all I had so you better go back to work."
B: "Ok. I really
will change things around. Thanks for understanding."
Business Trips
If you have a job that
requires traveling or business trips, there are many things you need to know
how to say. I recommend studying the Travelers Guide section I have for general
traveling needs. But for this lesson, I am going to cover the things you need
to say to the people you are traveling with and questions you need to ask about
the business trip. Most of this lesson is primarily showing you a variety of
questions you might need.
Details
When you go on a
business trip, you will need to find out a lot of information.
"Where are we going for our business trip?"
"Where are we going this time?"
"What city are we traveling to?"
"What is the objective for this business trip?"
"What is our goal for this business trip?"
"What do we want to accomplish for this business trip?"
"What is the primary purpose for this business trip?"
"What day are we departing for our business trip to Los Angeles ?"
"How long are we going to be there?"
"How long is the business trip scheduled for?"
"What time is ABC Company expecting us?"
"Who should I report to when I get to ABC Company?"
People who go on
business trips get a daily allowance for food and other small necessities. This
is called a per diem. The amount depends on the company, but you should ask how
much you get a day.
"How much is the per diem?"
"How much per diem do we get a day?"
"How do we get the per diem?"
"Isn't the per diem too low?"
"What do they expect us to eat with this amount of per diem?"
"Is the business trip really going to take us all five days?"
"If we finish on the fourth day, can we come back early?"
"I think we can finish a day early. Can we come back on Thursday if
we complete our work early?"
First time business trip Q's
If this is
your first time on a business trip, then you will have even more questions. If
you are not sure what to bring or how much stuff to bring, you can ask your
manager or a co-worker.
"How much do you usually pack for a week long business trip?"
"How big is the suitcase you take with you on a business trip?"
"Do the hotels we stay at have a hair dryer?"
"How many pieces of luggage do you bring with you on a business trip?"
"Where do you usually park when you go to the airport?"
"Is long term parking available at the airport?"
"How early should I go to the airport?"
"Where should we meet?"
"Should we meet at the airport?"
"I missed my flight. The next flight they have available is in 45 minutes. I'll have to meet you at the airport in Los Angeles. I'll call you when I land."
"How much do you usually pack for a week long business trip?"
"How big is the suitcase you take with you on a business trip?"
"Do the hotels we stay at have a hair dryer?"
"How many pieces of luggage do you bring with you on a business trip?"
"Where do you usually park when you go to the airport?"
"Is long term parking available at the airport?"
"How early should I go to the airport?"
"Where should we meet?"
"Should we meet at the airport?"
"I missed my flight. The next flight they have available is in 45 minutes. I'll have to meet you at the airport in Los Angeles. I'll call you when I land."
Talking to people
Talking to the
employees of the company you are visiting is very different than talking to
employees. Basically, you have to be polite and formal when dealing with them.
"Hi Mark, I'm Alex from ABC Consulting. It's nice to meet you."
During this stage, you might be engaged in small talk such as how your flight was or how the weather is over in your city, but if not, then you can get straight to work. You might need to know where you will be working. Only ask this if they never tell you. But chances are, they will let you know before you ask.
"Where will I be working this week?"
"Where is your office located?"
"Is your office relatively close to where I will be working?"
You might need to ask who you will be working with. But again, don't ask this too early, you should give them a chance to answer.
"Who will I be working with this week?"
"Hi Mark, I'm Alex from ABC Consulting. It's nice to meet you."
During this stage, you might be engaged in small talk such as how your flight was or how the weather is over in your city, but if not, then you can get straight to work. You might need to know where you will be working. Only ask this if they never tell you. But chances are, they will let you know before you ask.
"Where will I be working this week?"
"Where is your office located?"
"Is your office relatively close to where I will be working?"
You might need to ask who you will be working with. But again, don't ask this too early, you should give them a chance to answer.
"Who will I be working with this week?"
These previous questions should only be used in rare cases the other person doesn't tell you. The next couple of sentences are more likely.
"Who should I contact if I have a question regarding inaccurate data?"
"Who should I contact if I have a question with this type of problem?"
"I am going to be calling my manager frequently with critical updates. What phone should I use?"
"How long does it take to get to the airport from here?"
"How bad is the traffic around this time to the airport?"
"Where is the closest place to eat around here?"
"Is there a fast food restaurant near by?"
"Does this building have a cafeteria?"
"Do you have a cafeteria close by?"
Eating during the Business Trip
If you go on a business
trip alone, then you don't need to talk much, and you can eat whenever you
want. But if you go with a group, they might want to eat together. Some people
like to eat together all the time, but some people might not want to eat
because they are not hungry.
"What kind of food do you guys want to eat today?"
"Anybody want to go for lunch?"
"I'm going to lunch. Anybody want to join me?"
"Let's go in 20 minutes. I have to finish this real quick."
"I can't make it. I have to finish this and it will take me another 30 minutes."
"I'm going to pass today. I brought a bagel with me."
"I have a small sandwich. I'm just going to eat here."
"Where should we have dinner tonight?"
"Hey, let's go to the Italian restaurant next to the hotel."
"We can either go to the steak house in the hotel, or the Italian restaurant next door
"What kind of food do you guys want to eat today?"
"Anybody want to go for lunch?"
"I'm going to lunch. Anybody want to join me?"
"Let's go in 20 minutes. I have to finish this real quick."
"I can't make it. I have to finish this and it will take me another 30 minutes."
"I'm going to pass today. I brought a bagel with me."
"I have a small sandwich. I'm just going to eat here."
"Where should we have dinner tonight?"
"Hey, let's go to the Italian restaurant next to the hotel."
"We can either go to the steak house in the hotel, or the Italian restaurant next door
Business Trips - Interactive Practice
.
1
A: "Hey Mark, I'm
assigning you on the Tully project. You'll have to go to California in two weeks."
B: "What is my
objective over there?"
A: "You have to
review financial documents over there. If you find something missing, work with
their accountants to get the documents you need to complete the analysis."
B: "How large is
this project?"
A: "It's pretty
big, so take someone with you. I think you can finish in a week if two of you
are working on it."
B: "Do we have to
arrive there at a certain time?"
A: "Not really,
but you should get there before lunch to settle in. Then you can get in half a
day."
B: "Who should I
contact when I get there?"
A: "I'll email you
the details, but you should go book your flight soon."
B: "Will do. Do
you have a recommendation on who should go with me?"
A: "Either Seth or
Josh."
B: "Ok. I'll find
out who has more time."
A: "Great. Keep me
informed."
B: "Got it."
2
A: "Hey Seth, you
wanna go for lunch soon?"
B: "How about in
30 minutes. I'm almost done with this section."
A: "Ok. Where do
you want to eat?"
B: "I'm ok with
anything, but let's go to a fast food place."
A: "There's a
Burger King around the corner. Let's go there."
B: "Sounds good.
One quick question... I'm going to finish all my work tomorrow. If we finish
tomorrow, I suggest we head back home tomorrow evening. What do you
think?"
A: "I think that's
doable. We'll see how much we get done today, and if we're close, I'll let them
know that we'll be done tomorrow."
B: "Sounds
good."
Office and Cubicles
The office
has three types of workstation setting. Some companies provide a single office
for each employee, other companies have a cubicle system, and some companies
have desks put together in a large open space where everyone sits. I'll
separate this lesson into these three categories.
Desks all together
If you are in an environment where you have to sit at a desk right next to 15 other people with the same desks, I'm sorry for your situation. It's very uncomfortable working like this, but it is a reality. Here are some things I heard from people in this setting.
General statements or complaints
"It's not that bad, but there is no privacy."
"I wouldn't mind it so much if the manager couldn't see every minute of my day."
"I hate it. Even if they can't give us offices, they could at least give us cubicles."
"The reason I hate it so much is because I can't take a small break. Since the manager is always looking at everyone, even when I am not working, I have to pretend like I am."
"There are a lot of distractions. I can hear everything everyone says in the whole office."
"Mary sometimes turns on the music. It's not that bad, but sometimes I want it quiet."
"If I have a complaint about something, I can't talk to the manager because everyone will hear. I have to set up a meeting and use the conference room."
Questions and Requests
"I don't have another outlet near my desk. Can I get a power strip?"
"Can I move to a different location? The sun always glares off my monitor and I have trouble working."
"Can I sit on the other side of the room? This is too close to the door and it gets cold here."
"I get hot easily. Would it be possible if I sit next to the door? It is much cooler there."
Desks all together
If you are in an environment where you have to sit at a desk right next to 15 other people with the same desks, I'm sorry for your situation. It's very uncomfortable working like this, but it is a reality. Here are some things I heard from people in this setting.
General statements or complaints
"It's not that bad, but there is no privacy."
"I wouldn't mind it so much if the manager couldn't see every minute of my day."
"I hate it. Even if they can't give us offices, they could at least give us cubicles."
"The reason I hate it so much is because I can't take a small break. Since the manager is always looking at everyone, even when I am not working, I have to pretend like I am."
"There are a lot of distractions. I can hear everything everyone says in the whole office."
"Mary sometimes turns on the music. It's not that bad, but sometimes I want it quiet."
"If I have a complaint about something, I can't talk to the manager because everyone will hear. I have to set up a meeting and use the conference room."
Questions and Requests
"I don't have another outlet near my desk. Can I get a power strip?"
"Can I move to a different location? The sun always glares off my monitor and I have trouble working."
"Can I sit on the other side of the room? This is too close to the door and it gets cold here."
"I get hot easily. Would it be possible if I sit next to the door? It is much cooler there."
Cubicles
A cubicle is a work
area that is separated by small portable walls. It is generally about 4 to 5
feet high and it gives a little more privacy. Although it's not as good as an
office, it is much better than having to sit in an open area looking at
everyone. Another benefit of having a cubicle is that you can personalize the
space. There are small walls to put up pictures, decoration, or to put up a
white board or a cork board.
"I sit in the cubicle down the hall. It's next to the conference room."
"My cubicle is directly on the other side of this wall. Come by sometime."
"The files are on my desk in my cubicle. I'll get them for you."
"I walked by your cubicle and saw a heater. Where did you get such a small one like that? I think I want one for my cubicle as well."
"There are a couple of people with the name Steve in our office. If you say, 'Steve' real loud, you will see two heads appear at the same time. It's quite funny."
If you hear the term 'cube farm', it is referring to a huge space with a lot of cubicles.
"I heard ABC Company has a serious cube farm. Even the CEO has a cubicle. I think that's pretty cool."
"How big is your cubicle?"
"My cubicle is about 5 feet by 6 feet."
"It's roughly 5 by 6."
"I'm not sure, but it fits two small desks and a drawer. I guess it's big enough for me."
"I sit in the cubicle down the hall. It's next to the conference room."
"My cubicle is directly on the other side of this wall. Come by sometime."
"The files are on my desk in my cubicle. I'll get them for you."
"I walked by your cubicle and saw a heater. Where did you get such a small one like that? I think I want one for my cubicle as well."
"There are a couple of people with the name Steve in our office. If you say, 'Steve' real loud, you will see two heads appear at the same time. It's quite funny."
If you hear the term 'cube farm', it is referring to a huge space with a lot of cubicles.
"I heard ABC Company has a serious cube farm. Even the CEO has a cubicle. I think that's pretty cool."
"How big is your cubicle?"
"My cubicle is about 5 feet by 6 feet."
"It's roughly 5 by 6."
"I'm not sure, but it fits two small desks and a drawer. I guess it's big enough for me."
Office
If you think having an
office will stop all your complaints and you will be happy, you are mistaken.
It's amazing how people with their own office still find things to complain
about. I am just as guilty. I remember when I was sharing an office with one
other person, I was complaining about not having my own office. And when I got
my own office, I remember complaining about getting a bigger office. When I got
a bigger office, I remember complaining about not having a window office. Isn't
it strange how the complaints never end? Let's see some of the sentences for
this section.
"Why is Jack's office so much bigger than mine?"
"I'm next in line for a window office. How come you gave it to Paul?"
"There is an empty office across the hall. Can I have it?"
"It's great having my own office because I can surf the Internet and take a real break anytime I want."
"The privacy is probably the best thing about having my own office. I can't image working in a cubicle again."
A common phrase you might here from you manager is to come to their office.
"Can you stop by my office?"
"Stop by my office when you get a chance."
"Let's meet in my office."
If you want to stop by someone's office, you can say this.
"Can I stop by your office after lunch?"
"Can I come by your office now?"
"Can we talk in your office?"
"Why is Jack's office so much bigger than mine?"
"I'm next in line for a window office. How come you gave it to Paul?"
"There is an empty office across the hall. Can I have it?"
"It's great having my own office because I can surf the Internet and take a real break anytime I want."
"The privacy is probably the best thing about having my own office. I can't image working in a cubicle again."
A common phrase you might here from you manager is to come to their office.
"Can you stop by my office?"
"Stop by my office when you get a chance."
"Let's meet in my office."
If you want to stop by someone's office, you can say this.
"Can I stop by your office after lunch?"
"Can I come by your office now?"
"Can we talk in your office?"
Offices and Cubicles - Interactive Practice
1
A: "How are things
at work?"
B: "It's not too
bad. But I hate our office setting."
A: "Are you in a
cubicle?"
B: "No. I would be
happy with a cubicle. We have 10 desks all in a large room. The supervisor is
at one end with a view of everyone."
A: "That sucks.
You have no privacy."
B: "I know. I
can't even take a small break because everyone is watching. But that's not the
worst part. I can hear everyone talking all day long and it's so
distracting."
A: "I feel sorry
for you."
B: "I can't even
complain about something to the supervisor because everyone can hear."
A: "Why do they
have the office set up like that?"
B: "I'm not sure.
Maybe they want to save money, or maybe they think it's more effective."
A: "Is anybody in
an office?"
B: "Only the
people above the supervisor."
A: "Maybe if they
got out of their office and worked in the open space they would realize how
terrible it is."
B: "I guess I'll
just have to tolerate it for now."
2
A: "Do you have
cubicles in your company?"
B: "No. Everyone
has their own office."
A: "You're so
lucky. I'm in a cubicle."
B: "I'm so glad we
have our own office. There is so much privacy and we can take breaks whenever
we want."
A: "How does
management know if you are working or not?"
B: "Our company
doesn't really keep track of little details. Our performance is based on our
assignments and projects. Management doesn't care when it's done, they just
want the person to do a good job and turn it in on time."
A: "I like that
method. In our company, our manager wants to know every detail almost every
hour. If we are a little behind, the manager gets mad and starts
worrying."
B: "I would hate
that environment."
A: "I agree. It's
not a good work environment. Do you ever play video games in your office?"
B: "Not when it is
busy, but when we are experiencing a down time, I close the door and start a
game of Star Craft. If someone comes in, I quickly switch the view on the
monitor."
A: "You're so
lucky."
B: "I don't take
it for granted, but I wouldn't mind a window office soon."
A: "Shut up you
freak."
Quitting or Leaving Work
When the time comes to
leave work, you can do whatever you want. You can raise hell, say you hate
everyone and yell out, 'I quit!!!' But in other cases when you want to leave
professionally, you can use this lesson to help.
There's a common phrase when you are leaving a company. 'Don't burn the bridge.'
This is basically saying you should leave on a good term. If you leave on a good note, then you have the option of coming back to the company or your position if something goes wrong with your next job. So basically, you are leaving the bridge back to your position.
If you are leaving because you have an offer from a different company, here are some professional statements you can make to your manager.
"Hi Mark, I have a wonderful opportunity to work at a different company. I enjoyed my time here, but I shouldn't pass this up. I am putting in my two week notice."
Remember that in the States, changing job is very common. So it is no big deal when you leave a company. Businesses understand the need for change and realize that some people want different challenges in their life. So don't be nervous when you have to leave.
Giving a two week notice is standard. This gives your current employer the chance to hire someone to replace you. It also gives some time for you to finish the remaining work you have to do. Not giving a two week notice is one way to burn a bridge. The new company you are going into should realize this and will not expect you to start your job immediately if you have to give a two week notice. If you don't have a job, then this doesn't apply to you.
Here is another example.
"Hi Mark, unfortunately I have to tell you that I am leaving the company. I really enjoyed my time here and I appreciated all your help on my tasks. I have to put in my two week notice."
"Hi Mark, I received an offer from a different company. This is a great opportunity for me so I accepted the offer. My decision on leaving is not because I didn't like my duties here. I really enjoyed my experience. But I am at a point where I want to find other challenges. I hope you can understand."
I have seen some people leave the company to go on a year trip around the world. Others I have seen just wanted to spend more time with their kids. I know in some countries it is hard to get back into a company after you leave, but in the States, if you are a good employee, it is easy to get their job back. Many times after a long break, they returned to the same company.
"Mark, I have decided to leave the company. I have worked here for 10 years and I really enjoyed it. But I want to take a break and spend more time with my family. So I am putting in my two week notice."
"Hi Mark, I have come to a decision to leave the company. I am going to travel for a year and this is the best time period for me to do so. I always wanted to travel for an extended time period, and this is the only time I can do it. I can work for another month, so hopefully that should give you some time to find a replacement. And if you want, I can train the new employee on my areas."
There's a common phrase when you are leaving a company. 'Don't burn the bridge.'
This is basically saying you should leave on a good term. If you leave on a good note, then you have the option of coming back to the company or your position if something goes wrong with your next job. So basically, you are leaving the bridge back to your position.
If you are leaving because you have an offer from a different company, here are some professional statements you can make to your manager.
"Hi Mark, I have a wonderful opportunity to work at a different company. I enjoyed my time here, but I shouldn't pass this up. I am putting in my two week notice."
Remember that in the States, changing job is very common. So it is no big deal when you leave a company. Businesses understand the need for change and realize that some people want different challenges in their life. So don't be nervous when you have to leave.
Giving a two week notice is standard. This gives your current employer the chance to hire someone to replace you. It also gives some time for you to finish the remaining work you have to do. Not giving a two week notice is one way to burn a bridge. The new company you are going into should realize this and will not expect you to start your job immediately if you have to give a two week notice. If you don't have a job, then this doesn't apply to you.
Here is another example.
"Hi Mark, unfortunately I have to tell you that I am leaving the company. I really enjoyed my time here and I appreciated all your help on my tasks. I have to put in my two week notice."
"Hi Mark, I received an offer from a different company. This is a great opportunity for me so I accepted the offer. My decision on leaving is not because I didn't like my duties here. I really enjoyed my experience. But I am at a point where I want to find other challenges. I hope you can understand."
I have seen some people leave the company to go on a year trip around the world. Others I have seen just wanted to spend more time with their kids. I know in some countries it is hard to get back into a company after you leave, but in the States, if you are a good employee, it is easy to get their job back. Many times after a long break, they returned to the same company.
"Mark, I have decided to leave the company. I have worked here for 10 years and I really enjoyed it. But I want to take a break and spend more time with my family. So I am putting in my two week notice."
"Hi Mark, I have come to a decision to leave the company. I am going to travel for a year and this is the best time period for me to do so. I always wanted to travel for an extended time period, and this is the only time I can do it. I can work for another month, so hopefully that should give you some time to find a replacement. And if you want, I can train the new employee on my areas."
Negotiating before Leaving
Receiving a job offer
is another way to negotiate a salary increase or a position change. If you are
a great employee then your current employer might try to entice you to stay. If
you are willing to stay, you can say that you received another offer and you
are still thinking about it. If they try to make you stay, you can state what
it will take for you to stay.
"Hi Mark, I am at a crossroad in my career. I have recently
interviewed with a different company and they extended an offer to me. I
haven't decided yet, but I wanted to tell you before coming to a
decision."
If at this time they
ask you to stay, then you can ask for a couple of things.
"If I didn't like this company, it would be an easy decision, but I
really like it here. However, I have been asking to take on Program Management
responsibilities here. Also, they are offering me a 6 percent higher salary
than my current pay. Can anything be done about these two things?"
"Hi Mark, I have been thinking about moving back to my home town. I
have a job lined up, but I haven't decided yet. I wanted to let you know before
I make my final decision."
If they ask you to
stay, you can say the following, but if they don't ask you to stay, then it is
useless.
"Well, they are offering me a higher salary. It's 7 percent higher
than my current salary. Would it be possible for you guys to match
this?"
General Statements
When you talk to co-workers, you will eventually tell them that you are
leaving. Here are some general sentences.
"Next Friday is my last day."
"I already put in my two week notice."
"I'm leaving the company."
"I accepted a job offer from ABC Company. This Friday will be my last day here."
"I'm leaving this dump."
"I would've left a lot sooner but I had to get a job lined up first."
"I got screwed here so many times. I don't want to work here anymore. My last day is this Friday."
"It was great working with you. I wish you the best on this project."
"I had a wonderful time here. I wish the best for you."
"I really enjoyed working with you. I'll send you my personal email so keep in touch."
If someone else is leaving, then you can say something good like the example sentences below.
"I hope you enjoy your new job. Let me know if they have any another opening."
"Good luck in your new job. We'll keep your seat warm for you in case you want to return."
"Hey Jack, good luck with your new job and save me a seat."
"We'll miss you here. Good luck with your new career."
"Next Friday is my last day."
"I already put in my two week notice."
"I'm leaving the company."
"I accepted a job offer from ABC Company. This Friday will be my last day here."
"I'm leaving this dump."
"I would've left a lot sooner but I had to get a job lined up first."
"I got screwed here so many times. I don't want to work here anymore. My last day is this Friday."
"It was great working with you. I wish you the best on this project."
"I had a wonderful time here. I wish the best for you."
"I really enjoyed working with you. I'll send you my personal email so keep in touch."
If someone else is leaving, then you can say something good like the example sentences below.
"I hope you enjoy your new job. Let me know if they have any another opening."
"Good luck in your new job. We'll keep your seat warm for you in case you want to return."
"Hey Jack, good luck with your new job and save me a seat."
"We'll miss you here. Good luck with your new career."
Quitting or Leaving Work - Interactive Practice
1
A: "Hi Mark, I
have something important to tell you."
B: "Come on in.
What's on your mind?"
A: "Well, I have
decided to leave the company. I had a wonderful time here, but it is time to
move on for me."
B: "May I ask
why?"
A: "I got an offer
from ABC Company. It's a management position and I really don't want to let
this opportunity pass me by. You know I have been looking for a management
position here, but all the positions here are full."
B: "I understand
your decision and you have my support."
A: "Thanks for
understanding. I can work here two more weeks."
B: "Ok. Will you
be able to finish your current assignment?"
A: "Yes I will.
And if you hire someone within two weeks, I would be happy to provide training
on my areas."
B: "That would be
great. We're going to miss you here."
A: "I'm going to
miss this place too. Thanks."
2
A: "Hi Mary, I
interviewed with another company and they offered me a position. I wanted to
let you know before I made my decision."
B: "I'm sorry to
hear that. But I appreciate you telling me before you accepted the offer."
A: "I really enjoy
my work here, but I was concerned about the lack of opportunities. I put in
effort to gain more experience here, but the projects are limited."
B: "What would
help you to decide to stay?"
A: "I would
consider staying more if I could change my position. I would love working in
this same group, but I would like to be doing something different. And finally,
they offered me 6 percent more than my current salary."
B: "When do you
have to make a decision by?"
A: "They want me
to respond in a week."
B: "Let me see
what I can do and I'll let you know tomorrow or on Wednesday. Can you wait
until then?"
A: "That's not a
problem."
B: "Great. I'm
going to do everything I can to keep you on board."
A: "I appreciate
what you are doing for me."
B: "It's the least
I can do. You're a valuable asset here."
Asking for Directions
When you are looking
for something, it is sometimes easier to ask for directions. When you do, you have
to be able to listen to the directions given. In this lesson, we will study
listening a little more so you can effectively understand a person giving you
directions.
Here are some key words you have to remember. I suggest you drill these in your head because they are very commonly used when giving directions. There are many direction terminologies. I'll cover all the common phrases. You should be able to effectively give directions and receive directions after this lesson.
Asking for Directions
Most of the time, you should start by saying excuse me. The pronunciation for excuse me can be shortened. The shortened form sounds like 'scuse me.'
"Excuse me. Do you know where the post office is?"
"Excuse me. Can you point me to the nearest gas station?"
"Excuse me. Can you give me quick directions to the movie theatre?"
"Excuse me. Do you know how to get to the Shopping mall from here?"
"Excuse me. How do I get to the freeway from here?"
"Excuse me. I'm looking for Bank of America. I thought it was around here. Do you know where it is?"
"Excuse me. I'm looking for the post office. Do you know how to get there?"
"Excuse me. What is the best way to get to Seattle?"
When you ask for directions, the person responding will usually give you quick directions. The next section is a list of common phrases used when giving directions. You should study them carefully so when someone gives you directions, you can understand them without having to say 'one more time.'
Here are some key words you have to remember. I suggest you drill these in your head because they are very commonly used when giving directions. There are many direction terminologies. I'll cover all the common phrases. You should be able to effectively give directions and receive directions after this lesson.
Asking for Directions
Most of the time, you should start by saying excuse me. The pronunciation for excuse me can be shortened. The shortened form sounds like 'scuse me.'
"Excuse me. Do you know where the post office is?"
"Excuse me. Can you point me to the nearest gas station?"
"Excuse me. Can you give me quick directions to the movie theatre?"
"Excuse me. Do you know how to get to the Shopping mall from here?"
"Excuse me. How do I get to the freeway from here?"
"Excuse me. I'm looking for Bank of America. I thought it was around here. Do you know where it is?"
"Excuse me. I'm looking for the post office. Do you know how to get there?"
"Excuse me. What is the best way to get to Seattle?"
When you ask for directions, the person responding will usually give you quick directions. The next section is a list of common phrases used when giving directions. You should study them carefully so when someone gives you directions, you can understand them without having to say 'one more time.'
Left Right and Around the Corner
Take a Left/Right
"Take a left at the next light."
"Take a right at the gas station."
"When you get to Robson Street, take a left."
"After you pass 7-11, take a right at the next light."
"Take a left when you come to a stop sign."
Turn Left/Right
"Turn right on 112th."
"Turn left after you pass McDonalds."
"When you see a church on your left hand side, turn right on the next street."
"Turn left at the next street and immediately take another left."
Just/Right around the corner
"It's just right around the corner on the left side."
"It's right around the corner from the Starbucks over there."
"Go down the street, turn left on Williams Street, and it will be right around the corner from the gas station."
"Take a left at the next light."
"Take a right at the gas station."
"When you get to Robson Street, take a left."
"After you pass 7-11, take a right at the next light."
"Take a left when you come to a stop sign."
Turn Left/Right
"Turn right on 112th."
"Turn left after you pass McDonalds."
"When you see a church on your left hand side, turn right on the next street."
"Turn left at the next street and immediately take another left."
Just/Right around the corner
"It's just right around the corner on the left side."
"It's right around the corner from the Starbucks over there."
"Go down the street, turn left on Williams Street, and it will be right around the corner from the gas station."
Across Blocks and Miles
Go for five
blocks/After three blocks
"After you turn right, go for five blocks and turn left. It will be
right around the corner."
"After three blocks, turn left. You will see it on your right hand
side."
"Go for four blocks and then turn right."
Across the street
from/Directly across
"It's across the street from the library."
"It's directly across from Taco Bell ."
"Go for three blocks, turn left at the next light. You'll see it
across the street from McDonalds."
"Go down the street. You'll see it directly across from the gas
station."
Go for 2 miles
"It's pretty far from here. Go on Washington Street for about 2 miles.
You'll see it next to a school."
"Turn right at the stop sign and go straight for a couple of miles.
At 112th turn left. You'll see it on your right hand side."
"Go straight on this street for about 3 miles. You'll see it next
to Wendy's."
Light and 'Y'
On the third light
"Go down this street, after you pass two stop lights, turn right on the third light. You'll see it right around the corner."
"Head down Madison Street and on the fourth light, turn left. You should see it immediately."
"Turn right on Jackson. Keep going straight for three lights. When you see Burger King, turn left. It's right there."
The 'Y'
A 'Y' is a street that turns into two. It's not really a left turn or a right turn, but the street is shaped like the letter 'Y'.
"Keep going down this street. Stay on the left side when you reach the 'Y'. At the next light, turn right."
"Take a left on Jackson. At the 'Y' go to the right. It will be on your left hand side about a mile down that street."
"Go for about three miles on this street. At the 'Y' go to the left. You'll see a blue house on your right. It's right after that house."
"Go down this street, after you pass two stop lights, turn right on the third light. You'll see it right around the corner."
"Head down Madison Street and on the fourth light, turn left. You should see it immediately."
"Turn right on Jackson. Keep going straight for three lights. When you see Burger King, turn left. It's right there."
The 'Y'
A 'Y' is a street that turns into two. It's not really a left turn or a right turn, but the street is shaped like the letter 'Y'.
"Keep going down this street. Stay on the left side when you reach the 'Y'. At the next light, turn right."
"Take a left on Jackson. At the 'Y' go to the right. It will be on your left hand side about a mile down that street."
"Go for about three miles on this street. At the 'Y' go to the left. You'll see a blue house on your right. It's right after that house."
Dead end and 'T'
The 'T'
A 'T' intersection is a
three way intersection. You can either go left or right. The street is shaped
like the letter 'T' so people call it a 'T'. Sometimes they don't call it a
'T'. Other names for a 'T' intersection you might here are more descriptive.
Here is a list.
'When the road ends...'
'When you can't go
anymore...'
'Three way
intersection...'
"At the 'T' intersection, turn right. It is just around the
corner."
"When you pass a gas station, you will come up to a 'T'. Take a
left, and then an immediate right."
"Go down this road until it ends. Turn left at the 'T' and you will
see the gas station on your right."
Dead end
This isn't a direction
terminology, but dead end is a road that has only one entrance. That means the
only way out is the way you came in. All dead end streets will have a sign at
the entrance with the word '