Offering and Requesting 2021
Offering and Requesting 2021
REQUESTING
1. Making requests – asking someone to do something for you
Speaking tip
2. Making requests – asking if you can do
something
When you’re using these two sentences, don’t use please. It’s already polite enough!
Speaking tip
3. Offering to do something for another person
You can make an offer using a phrase like Can I… ?, Shall I… ?, Would you like me to… ?
For example:
● “Can I help you?”
● “Shall I open the window for you?”
● “Would you like another coffee?”
● “Would you like me to answer the phone?”
● “I’ll do the photocopying, if you like.”
Shall, can and will are followed by the verb without to.
Shall is particularly British English and is more formal than can.
Would you like… is followed either by a noun, or by an object
pronoun and the verb with to.
Responding to offers - These English dialogues show you ways
to accept or reject offers made to you.
Venus
“Can
VenusI help
hasyou?”
a beautiful name “Can I help you?”
and is the second planet from
the Sun.
“YesIt’s terribly
please. I’dalike
very
tohot “No thanks, I’m just
place—even
know what time hotter than
the train looking.” (In a shop.)
leaves.” Mercury
“Would you like another coffee?”
“Shall I open the window for “No thanks.” Or, “No thank you.”
you?”
“Would you like another coffee?”
“Yes please. That would be very
kind of you.” “Yes please, that would be lovely.” Or,
“Yes please, I’d love one.”
Thank
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1. You're in an English class and you would like to borrow another student's pen. You say:
__ you lend me your pen, please?
a. Can
b. Do you mind
c. Would you mind
2. Your colleague is going out to get lunch and you'd like him / her to get something for
you. You start your request:
Could you __ me a favour?
a. do
b. give
c. make
4. You are a parent with two children. They want to go out, but you want them to do their
homework first. You say:
I'd __ you to do your homework first.
a. like
b. need
c. want
7. A customer buys a lot from you and wants a bigger discount. You want to keep the
customer happy but you need your boss to agree. You say:
I'll __ what I can do.
a. ask
b. know
c. see
8. Your colleague wants you to help with an urgent problem, but you can't. You say:
I'm __ I can't help you there.
a. afraid
b. sure
c. worried
9. You are the boss and someone who works for you asks for an extra day's holiday. You
accept the request but ask the person to work Saturday instead. You say:
That's no problem, __ you work on Saturday.
a. and
b. but
c. provided
10. Your boss asks you to work overtime (extra hours) but you can't. You say:
Ah, that __ be a bit difficult.
a. can
b. might
c. should