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  • Hello, everybody. My name is Benjamin, and I'm here to help you become more confident

  • with your spoken, written, and listening English. Okay? Today we're going to be doing a lesson

  • to increase your confidence on the telephone, because it's incredibly important when you

  • start entering a new country and you want to speak English to get a job, you need to

  • be able to speak on the phone to be able to get that job or do what you are doing.

  • So, today, we're going to talk about how you leave a message with a person, times when

  • you want to leave... When you want to be phoned back, and how to leave a message on an answering

  • machine. Okay? So we're doing on a person, on an answering machine, and when you want

  • to be phoned back. Okay? Great.

  • So, when we are speaking to someone on the phone and we do not get the person we want

  • to speak to... I want to speak to Mark, but his friend, Dan, is there. So, I say to Dan:

  • "Can you ask him"-as in Mark-"to call me back?" I want Mark to call me back; to telephone

  • me back. Okay? "Can you ask him", so I have my verb, and then I have my indirect object

  • here: "to call me back". Okay? That's one way of doing it.

  • Second way, if I don't need Mark to call me back, but I want Mark to know that I have

  • phoned him, I could just say: "Can you just tell him/her", in this case:

  • "Can you just tell Mark that I called?" or "I called"? Okay? "That" is optional. Okay?

  • "Can you just tell Mark that I called?"

  • Or, if I want to know if Mark is still meeting me at the pub tonight, at the bar, I could

  • say: "Can you just ask him if we're still on for meeting at the pub later tonight?"

  • Okay? "Can you just ask him if we're still on for"? "Still on for" being an arrangement

  • to see if that arrangement is still correct.

  • Okay? "Can you just ask him if we're still on for"?

  • If we are continuing with that plan.

  • Or, again, this is a way of saying that I called, I can say:

  • "Can you say that Benjamin called?" Okay? Good.

  • Now, with this one of phoning back, it might be that there's a specific time that I want

  • Mark to phone me. So, if I want Mark to phone me on Wednesday, I will say to his friend,

  • Dan: "Dan, can you ask him to call me back on", I've got a set day, so I'm going to say:

  • "Wednesday". Okay? Or, I could use a date, so I could say: "On the 21st of November".

  • Okay? So I want him to ring me on that day; it's one particular day.

  • Now, "by" is a deadline. I need Mark to call me by, no later than... He must call me by;

  • not after, he needs to call me before. "By", he needs to call me by 3pm today. He needs

  • to call me no later than Thursday. He needs to call me by the 18th. He needs to call me

  • by December. Okay? So, "by" is a deadline; the latest time he can call me.

  • "In", "in" is a... He needs to call me in this time, here. In the morning. Okay? It's

  • in this time. If it's the month, then maybe he needs to call me in November. Okay? It's

  • a time that he needs to call me in. Okay? "In": "in November", "in the morning",

  • "in the evening". Maybe I work in the day, so he needs to call me in the part of the day

  • of the evening. Good.

  • And last one, if I'm a very, very busy person... Okay? I need him to call me at 8pm. 8pm is

  • the only time I will listen to Mark calling me. Okay? So: "Dan, please tell Mark to call me at 8pm."

  • or "8 in the evening". Okay? Then I have left my message, and I just go and

  • wait for my call. So, I'll go and see if Mark has phoned me.

  • Mark didn't call me back, so I'm going to have to ring him, and see if he picks up.

  • Ah, it's gone straight to his voicemail, so now I need to leave him a message on his phone.

  • Okay? So this is kind of a standardized form for how to leave a message on your phone.

  • You don't need to do all of these if you're calling a friend. So if I'm calling Mark,

  • maybe I just say: "Hi there, Mark. It's Benjamin. Sorry to miss you", because I missed him;

  • I didn't connect with him, I didn't call him: "Sorry to miss you. I hope to still see you tomorrow night."

  • Okay? So he already knows me; I don't need to tell him how he knows

  • me. And he knows my number because he's my friend, and I'm just telling to... Calling

  • him about an arrangement.

  • But if you're calling someone you don't know, maybe you've just arrived in a country and

  • you're calling someone about a job, or about accommodation, whatever it is: You introduce

  • yourself. So: "Hello, this is Benjamin." Okay? "This is" and then you put your name. Or:

  • "Hello, it's..." If you want to be a little bit more informal, you can say:

  • "Hi there, this is" or "it's".

  • Now, how you know that person. Maybe you don't know that person. If you do know that person,

  • you could say: "I'm that guy you met at the bar on Friday night." Or if it's a business

  • call, maybe you'd say: "It's customer relations", or "It's customer support",

  • or "It's the sales team". So, you're kind of saying how you know them.

  • Now, why you're calling. This is important for any message you leave. "Just to let you know that..."

  • Okay? So, "just" is a nice, polite way of saying:

  • "It's just a little thing. Don't worry. It's not a huge, big problem. It's just a little thing.",

  • "Just to let you know", so we've got the infinitive, here, "to let", to inform you, to inform you. Okay?

  • "To let you know that I will be at the pub on Wednesday at 7 o'clock.",

  • "Just to let you know", if I'm calling about work: "Just to let you know that I am available for work."

  • Okay? Reason of calling: "I'd like to meet you in person.", "In person", for real, not

  • on the phone, I'd like to talk to you.

  • Now, how you want to be contacted. So, presumably a telephone number, an email address.

  • "You can contact me on phone number" or "My mobile number is",

  • whatever it is, 077-blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

  • Or you could put a landline number, that's a normal telephone in a room.

  • Okay? Not a mobile, but the kind of phone you have in a house or a building. Or you

  • put an email address. Okay?

  • Now, when they can contact you. "I'm in..." As in: "I'm in the house, you can contact

  • me during the evenings.", "I'm in most evenings.", "I'm in during the day." Okay? Or:

  • "You can contact me most evenings between 7 and 9pm.",

  • "between", so you've got a timeframe, between

  • these two times.

  • And then you want to draw the message to an end: "I look forward", okay? "I look forward to"

  • the future. "I look forward to hearing from you soon." Okay? In the next day or two.

  • Great. Don't make it too long, nice and clear. Who are you? Why are you calling? What number?

  • When? And end it. Great. I hope that helps. Do, now, go and try the quiz on www.engvid.com.

  • If you'd like to learn more from me, see more of my lessons, do subscribe to my YouTube channels.

  • Okay. Well done. Keep learning that English. Bye.

Hello, everybody. My name is Benjamin, and I'm here to help you become more confident

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