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  2. Business English- "Have You Ever" Job Interview Questions Games

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/lesson-plans/view-business-english-have-you-ever...

    have a leadership position. have a part-time job. have a very challenging job. have an accident at work/ have an injury at work. have an idea rejected. have career advice. have to apologise. interview job applicants/ interview candidates for a job in your company.

  3. Business English- Describing Companies - UsingEnglish.com

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/lesson-plans/view-business-english-describing...

    Choose a company below that you know quite well and describe it until your partner guesses which one you are talking about. Then discuss if they agree with your description. Amazon.com. Avon. Boeing. Caterpillar. Citigroup. Coca Cola. Costco.

  4. Adverbs of Frequency- Business Culture - UsingEnglish.com

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/lesson-plans/view-adverbs-of-frequency-business...

    Business culture in your country frequency expressions discuss and agree. Use frequency expressions like “Once or twice a year” and “Almost never” to make general statements about business culture in your country. You can also make statements about smaller groups of people such as middle managers, directors or male office workers.

  5. Formal Letter Format: How to Write a Formal Letter -...

    www.usingenglish.com/resources/letter-writing.ph

    4) Use the right greeting or salutation. The tip to starting a formal English letter is to greet the person you're writing to in the correct way. This is known as the 'Salutation'. If you know the name of the person you're writing to then use 'Sir' or 'Madam' here, otherwise write their full name, including their title.

  6. Business English- Christmas Cards Do's & Don't's

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/lesson-plans/view-business-english-christmas...

    Include the names of a business associate’s family in a business Xmas card _____ show a personal touch. Write, print or stamp your company name in the Christmas card, ______________ any business cards you include might become separated from the Xmas card, making it difficult for them to remember who it is from.

  7. Numbers Lesson Plans & Worksheets - UsingEnglish.com

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/lesson-plans/themes/34.html

    Common ways of mispronouncing numbers review, including L1 interference and sounds which are difficult to say and put together. Browse our collection of PDF lesson plans and worksheets about 'Numbers' for English language teachers, complete with answers and teachers' notes. Free to download and use in class!

  8. Big list of British and American vocabulary by topic

    www.usingenglish.com/articles/big-list-british-american-vocabulary-by-topic.html

    Big list of British and American vocabulary by topic. Nearly 900 different UK and US meanings and expressions on food, travel, places, people, law and order, education, medicine, STEM subjects, business, sports and games, multi-word verbs, idioms, office vocab, the arts and media, nature, and politics.

  9. Business English- Video & Teleconference Roleplay Phrases

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/lesson-plans/view-business-english-video...

    Suggested phrases. The video has some problems “You’re (very/ rather) jerky.” “I can’t see people at the edge of the room.” “Your image has frozen.” “The image has disappeared.” “The image and sound are out of synch.”.

  10. 21 negotiating in English games - UsingEnglish.com

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/articles/21-negotiating-in-english-games.html

    Negotiating language simplest responses game; Quite a lot of negotiating language can be divided into two opposing groups of phrases, e.g. starting and ending negotiations, insisting and softening your position, positive and negative, sure and unsure, commenting or getting the other person to comment, formal and informal, direct and indirect, and extending or trying to end a negotiation.

  11. Meeting People- Key Words, Phrases, Dialogues and Topics

    www.usingenglish.com/teachers/lesson-plans/view-meeting-people-key-words...

    Already know names, companies, jobs/ roles, countries, etc. Met at the same event two years ago and emailed just after. Fairly informal. Good topics of conversation: business conditions, products, people you both know. Already exchanged business cards. Have to talk to other people but will email later and hopefully meet up again