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Greetings Excercise

The document provides examples of greetings, farewells, and special expressions in English. It gives neutral, less formal, and different times of day greetings. It also provides farewell expressions for leaving or saying goodbye. Finally, it lists special expressions for things like getting someone's attention, congratulating, wishing luck, and responding to sneezes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
204 views

Greetings Excercise

The document provides examples of greetings, farewells, and special expressions in English. It gives neutral, less formal, and different times of day greetings. It also provides farewell expressions for leaving or saying goodbye. Finally, it lists special expressions for things like getting someone's attention, congratulating, wishing luck, and responding to sneezes.

Uploaded by

mbelatti-1
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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UNIT

27
A

Greetings, farewells, and


special expressions
Greetings
Neutral to formal:
A: Hi./Hello. How are you?
B: Fine, thank you. / Fine, thanks.
. . . How are you? / How
about you?

Less formal:
Hi/Hey. How are things? /
Hows it going? / Howre you doing?
B: Pretty good. / OK. / All right. /
Im good. . . . How about you?
A:

We sometimes use these greetings at different times of day:


Good morning. / Good afternoon. / Good evening. [We
dont use Good night as a greeting.]

Nice to meet you.


Same here.

When meeting someone for the rst time, we can say:


Nice to meet you. [The answer could be Nice to meet you
too. / Same here.]
How do you do? / Pleased to meet you. (formal)

Farewells
Good-bye. (neutral to formal)
Take care. / Take it easy. / So long. / Bye. / See you. (less formal)
See you later. / See you soon. [if you plan to see someone again, soon]
Good/Nice to see you. [a greeting or a farewell to someone you already know]
Nice meeting you. [to say good-bye to someone youve just met for the rst time]
Good night. [to say good-bye late at night or if one or both of you is going to bed]
Have a nice day/evening/weekend. [to say good-bye to a friend or colleague or to
a customer in a store; the response could be: You too.]

Special expressions
Excuse/Pardon me.

(a) To get someones attention. (b) To get past someone who is in


your way. (c) To say you are sorry, e.g., if you stand on someones
foot. [or: I beg your pardon.] (d) Say Excuse me (not Pardon me)
before you leave the room.
Excuse/Pardon me? / To ask someone to repeat what was said.
I beg your pardon?
To your health. /
A toast when people have a drink together. It could also be To
Cheers.
your new job. / To friendship. / To romance. etc.
Good luck!
To wish someone success, e.g., on exams / a job interview / a
contest.
Congratulations.
To someone who has achieved something or had good fortune,
e.g., found a job, graduated, got a raise. Also Good job! or Nice
going! (informal)
Bless you.
To someone when they sneeze. They can reply: Thank you. / Thanks.
Happy birthday. /
To wish someone well on their birthday / on or soon after New
Happy New Year.
Years Day (often printed or written on greeting cards).
56
Cambridge University Press

www.cambridge.org

UNIT

27

Exercises
27.1

What would you say or write to a friend in these situations?


1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

27.2

Your friend turns 21 tomorrow. Happy birthday! / Congratulations!


It is January 1st or soon after.
Your friend has just passed an important exam.
Your friend is going to take a driving test next week.
You know you are going to see your friend again in a few hours.

Complete the conversations in a logical way.


1.

3.

.................................

This is Kevin Ward.

2.

Thank you.

.................................

.................................

.................................

4.

.................................

You too.

27.3

What would you say in these situations? (Dont use Excuse me more than twice.)
1. You are in a meeting. Someone comes in to say you have an urgent telephone
call. What do you say as you leave? Excuse me. This wont take long.
2. Someone says something to you, but you dont hear all of it.
3. You are on a crowded bus. It is your stop and you want to get off. What do
you say to the other passengers as you move past them?
4. You are staying with friends. You leave the room in the evening to go to bed.
5. A friend tells you she has just won a contest.
6. Another friend is going for a job interview this afternoon.
7. You met a new business client for the rst time an hour ago, and now you are
both leaving.
8. While shopping, you meet an old friend (by chance), who you havent seen in
ages.

27.4

When do we use these expressions? Do you have similar ones in your language?
Say cheese.

Watch out.

I have no idea.

Good for you!


57

Cambridge University Press

www.cambridge.org

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