Action items meaning
After a meeting, someone says: Let’s confirm the action items. What do they mean?
Meeting phrases are compact, but they carry real responsibility.
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After a meeting, someone says: Let’s confirm the action items. What do they mean?
Meeting phrases are compact, but they carry real responsibility.
After a meeting, someone says: Let’s confirm the action items. What do they mean?
Meeting phrases are compact, but they carry real responsibility.
In a workplace mini-scenario, After a meeting, someone says: Let’s confirm the action items. What do they mean?
Meeting phrases are compact, but they carry real responsibility.
The client request is unclear. You need one missing detail before starting.
Clarifying without sounding negative is high-value workplace English.
The client request is unclear. You need one missing detail before starting.
Clarifying without sounding negative is high-value workplace English.
In a workplace mini-scenario, The client request is unclear. You need one missing detail before starting.
Clarifying without sounding negative is high-value workplace English.
In a travel situation, The client request is unclear. You need one missing detail before starting.
Clarifying without sounding negative is high-value workplace English.
Tell a client the timeline is on track, but one approval is still pending.
This checks whether the user can sound calm and precise.
Tell a client the timeline is on track, but one approval is still pending.
This checks whether the user can sound calm and precise.
In a workplace mini-scenario, Tell a client the timeline is on track, but one approval is still pending.
This checks whether the user can sound calm and precise.
In a workplace mini-scenario, Tell a client the timeline is on track, but one approval is still pending.
This checks whether the user can sound calm and precise.
Choose the safest opening for an email about a late report.
Tone plus timeline is the money skill in business English.
In a workplace mini-scenario, Choose the safest opening for an email about a late report.
Tone plus timeline is the money skill in business English.
In a workplace mini-scenario, Choose the safest opening for an email about a late report.
Tone plus timeline is the money skill in business English.
Rank these feedback requests from safest to riskiest.
Advanced business English is often judgment, not grammar.
Rank these feedback requests from safest to riskiest.
Advanced business English is often judgment, not grammar.
In a workplace mini-scenario, Rank these feedback requests from safest to riskiest.
Advanced business English is often judgment, not grammar.
In a workplace mini-scenario, Rank these feedback requests from safest to riskiest.
Advanced business English is often judgment, not grammar.
A teammate asks for a same-day task that is unrealistic. Choose the best reply.
Polite pushback is sticky because it feels like a real work superpower.
In a workplace mini-scenario, A teammate asks for a same-day task that is unrealistic. Choose the best reply.
Polite pushback is sticky because it feels like a real work superpower.
In a workplace mini-scenario, A teammate asks for a same-day task that is unrealistic. Choose the best reply.
Polite pushback is sticky because it feels like a real work superpower.
Rank these client delay messages from safest to riskiest.
Creates a status-game feeling around expensive work English.
You need to reschedule a client call from Tuesday to Thursday.
Rescheduling tests tone and usefulness at the same time.
You need to reschedule a client call from Tuesday to Thursday.
Rescheduling tests tone and usefulness at the same time.
In a workplace mini-scenario, You need to reschedule a client call from Tuesday to Thursday.
Rescheduling tests tone and usefulness at the same time.
In a workplace mini-scenario, You need to reschedule a client call from Tuesday to Thursday.
Rescheduling tests tone and usefulness at the same time.
A friend says each word about the same situation. Order the intensity from mildest to strongest.
Quickly makes the user question how precise their words are.
I told my laptop I needed more space.
A short joke ending is easy to send to friends.
A manager looks at a draft and says, 'It is not bad, but I would not send it yet.' What does she mean?
Users feel they are decoding a real meeting, not answering a school quiz.
A waiter lowers his voice and points to an untouched plate. What is he doing?
Feels like understanding a TV scene without subtitles.
A client asks why the update is late. Which order goes from safest to most risky?
Turns naturalness into a risk-ranking game.
You need a missing file from a client. Which order goes from safest to most translated?
Turns a normal question into a status game: can you spot the expensive wording?
Find the stapler, invoice, and charging cable on the desk.
The user feels clever when they spot all three.
A client is waiting and a teammate is in Slack. Put each phrase in the safer place.
Shows a practical workplace weakness quickly.
A customer says, 'I need something for a sore throat, but I do not want anything that makes me sleepy.'
High-stakes enough to feel useful without being too technical.
A teammate missed a deadline. Sort the replies into safer and riskier workplace English.
The user sees which phrases could quietly cost social points.
You feel a little uneasy before a presentation, but not truly afraid. Which word fits best?
A tiny personality-relevant vocabulary trap.
In a meeting, someone says, 'That timeline is a little ambitious' while everyone looks at the project plan. What do they mean?
Makes the user wonder how much workplace English they miss.
Craft a polite message asking for a refund because the item arrived damaged.
A useful sentence the user can imagine sending.
Before you restart the router, unplug the modem, wait ten seconds, then plug the modem back in.
Shows that the learner can miss meaning while knowing every noun.