Making requests



Yüklə 23,98 Kb.
tarix24.12.2023
ölçüsü23,98 Kb.
#191780
Making requests.


Making requests.
When we make a request, we ask someone for something, or we ask someone to do something.
Asking for something
There are different ways of asking for something. We usually ask for something in a polite and indirect way, for example, using can, could, would you mind if and may:
A:Can I have the salt?
B:Of course, here you are.
A:Could I ask you the time, please?
B:No problem. It’s quarter past four.
A:Would you mind if I borrowed your pen, please?
B:Of course, here you are.
A:May I have the bill, please? (May is more formal.)
B:Certainly, Madam.
I need is very direct and is usually used for urgent requests:
I need a doctor.
I need the fire extinguisher. Fast!
I want is very direct and can sound impolite. We don’t normally use it to make requests unless we want to be very direct:
I want to speak to the manager right now. I am not leaving here until I get my money back.

Asking someone to do something


There are a number of ways of asking someone to do something in a polite and indirect way. We often use please to make our requests more polite:
Could you call a taxi for me, please?
Would you ask Rose whether she has signed the card, please?
Would you mind collecting my suit from the dry cleaner’s, please?
Do you think you could come in ten minutes early tomorrow, before the presentation?
We sometimes use can you and will you to make requests but they are more informal:
Mum, can you wake me at seven o’clock?
Will you send me an email tomorrow just to remind me to book a hotel?
We need is often used in work contexts by a boss or manager to ask for something to be done in a polite way:
We need to email the contract to Peter immediately.
We need someone to go to the meeting in Paris on Wednesday. Bill can’t go.
When we are not sure if someone will be able to do what we ask, we sometimes use you wouldn’t …, would you? or you couldn’t …, could you?:
You wouldn’t drop this into the post office for me, would you?
You couldn’t stop at a bank machine, could you?
In formal letters and formal emails, we can use the following expressions:
would be grateful if you could send me more information about the course.
We would be most grateful if you could send someone to meet us at the airport as we do not speak Japanese.
There are many ways to form an appropriate request in English depending on the context. First, look at the following examples of requests. Can you guess which ones are very indirect, and which ones are more direct?
a. Let me see your notes.
b. Do you think I could see your notes?
c. I seem to have lost my notes…
d. I want your notes.
e. Can I borrow your notes?
f. Please show me your notes.
g. Would it be alright if I borrowed your notes for a bit?

As you’ve probably guessed, a, d, and f are more direct (and therefore, less polite) than the other requests. B, e, and g are more polite, and c is clearly the least direct. By describing something negative, the speaker is inviting the listener to offer to lend her notes. As a general rule, formal requests (such as to professors and employers) should be polite and not overly direct. In the sections that follow, you’ll learn specific strategies for forming a variety of requests.
Using the Past Tense
To make a request less direct (and therefore, more polite), there are a couple strategies. The first one is to use the past tense, such as the simple past or past progressive. By phrasing requests in the past tense, a sense of distance is created between the speaker and the thing being requested. In this way, the request is seen as being less direct, and therefore, less confrontational toward the speaker. Look at the following examples:
I was hoping to leave work a little early today.
I wondered if I could leave work a little early today.
Practice making the following requests more polite by changing their verb forms in the past tense:
1. I wonder if you can review my report.
2. Can you review my report when you have the time?
3. I hope you can review my report.
Yüklə 23,98 Kb.

Dostları ilə paylaş:




Verilənlər bazası müəlliflik hüququ ilə müdafiə olunur ©azkurs.org 2024
rəhbərliyinə müraciət

gir | qeydiyyatdan keç
    Ana səhifə


yükləyin