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- 英语听力实用场景:视频电话和面对面会议安排技巧
英语听力实用场景:视频电话和面对面会议安排技巧
- 华盛顿大学:商务英语(社交/会议/计划/谈判/演讲) 小提示:阅读此文章需要时间:[13分14秒]
Hello, Mary Russell. Yes, hello. This is Wilson Power. I met you last week in Seattle. Oh, right. Wilson, I remember. And your Maria's friend. Right. Yes. So, Mary, I'm going to be in Toronto this week. And I was wondering if we could meet to talk about a possible project with RDX. Well, sure. Do you want to come to my office or should we meet somewhere else? Oh, your office would be fine. I'm going to meet Maria for lunch on Thursday right near your office. Okay. So, let's say 11 o'clock on Thursday. Perfect. Would you be able to meet with me at the convention next week? Yes, of course. I'd be happy to. When did you have in mind? Are you free on Friday at 9.30? Let me check. Oh, no. I'm not free then. How about 10.30? Yes, that would be fine. Okay. So, where should we meet? Well, our company has a conference room reserved in the hotel that we could use. In the Hilton? Yes, it's the ambassador room on the third floor. Okay. Let me just put that in my calendar. Friday, 10.30, the ambassador room. Oh, okay. Great. I look forward to seeing you then. See you then.
I'm calling to see if I could stop by your office to show you our new product line. Well, yes. That would be all right. Would 3.30 this afternoon work? Tomorrow morning would be better. That's fine. What time is convenient for you? How about 10.30? Okay. That sounds good. In Module 2, you learned about using appropriate degrees of formality or informality in writing. Do you remember this line? The same guidelines apply here when you're making arrangements to meet someone. As long as you choose somewhere approximately along the line that's appropriate for the situation, you should be okay. The important question is this one. Who am I talking with? And is having a meeting normal and expected? Or is asking for something special?
Think about these next situations. You'd like to meet someone you've never met. Would you be more formal or informal or just neutral? More formal. It's probably better to use a little more formal language in this situation. You're talking to a colleague about getting together on a project you're working on. More informal. A meeting like this is normal and expected, and a colleague would expect informal language. Your peers are equals, so you don't have to worry about being formal. You've been working with this team member for six months on a project. More informal. The meeting is a normal, every day event. If you've been working with these team members for six months, you probably know them fairly well. You want to have an information interview with someone who might be able to help you get a job at his or her company. You hope this person will meet with you, but you're not sure. It's important to make a good impression so you would be more formal. You're calling a potential client, hoping to set up a meeting to show him or her a new product line. You don't know this person, and you want to make a good impression. More formal language would be more professional and respectful.
You want to talk with your supervisor in private. Neutral. This depends a lot on your relationship with your supervisor, but neutral is probably the best choice here. You don't want to be formal because it might seem strange to your supervisor. On the other hand, you don't want to be too informal because it might seem unprofessional. You are setting up a meeting with a colleague from an international subsidiary of your company. Neutral is again the best choice. The meeting is normal, but you don't want to be too formal because it might seem unfriendly. On the other hand, you don't want to be too informal because it might seem unprofessional, especially to someone you don't know well. Now, you'll watch the videos from the beginning of this lesson again. As you listen, think about these questions. What is their relationship? Are they colleagues at work? Do they know each other well?
When a meeting is routine and not something special, you can make a suggestion instead of a request. Suggestions often need we as the subject. Say these sentences with me. How about getting together next week? Why don't we meet again tomorrow? Maybe we should get together next week. When you don't know someone or when you're not sure they'll help you out by meeting with you, you make a request like these. Requests are a bit longer and more indirect. Say these sentences with me. I was wondering if you could meet with me. Would you be able to meet? I'm calling to find out if I could stop by. Would it be alright if I stopped by your office? They give someone more distance and don't assume that the other person will say yes. We often say get together instead of meet. So a bit less formal than meet. If we want to pay a short visit to someone's office or home, we say stop by. For example, meet with someone. Get together with someone. Stop by your office.
Figuring out a time and place to meet usually involves some back-and-forth discussion. Here are some common ways we negotiate time and place. When are you free? When's a good time? What's a good day? What time is good for you? So where should we meet? Are you free on Tuesday morning? How about Friday at two? Notice the use of would to soften questions. This makes the question a bit more indirect. Is Friday okay? Would Friday be okay? Does Friday work for you? Would Friday work for you? When would be a good day? Would Tuesday morning be convenient for you? There are also a lot of options when you respond to a suggestion for meeting or a time or place. First, you could accept. That sounds fine. That sounds good. That works for me. Yes, that would be fine. Or you could say no. When we say no to an invitation, we usually always have some kind of explanation to avoid sounding rude. Oh, I'm sorry. That's not a good day for me. Sorry. That won't work for me. Sorry, I can't. I have another meeting. Tomorrow would be better. Could you meet earlier? Could we meet somewhere closer? Sometimes we can't answer right away. Here are some expressions we use for that. Let me check. Let me get back to you. I'll get back to you. I need to check my calendar. When we make plans to meet, we sometimes use the word schedule. It's both a noun and a verb. How does your schedule look? Let me check my schedule and get back to you. Could we schedule something next week? Let's schedule it later in the month.
- convention
名词会议; 全体与会者; 国际公约; 惯例,习俗,规矩
1. 习俗;惯例;常规
A convention is a way of behaving that is considered to be correct or polite by most people in a society.e.g. It's just a social convention that men don't wear skirts...
男人不穿裙子只是一种社会习俗。
e.g. Despite her wish to defy convention, she had become pregnant and married at 21.
尽管她不想遵循传统习俗,但她还是在21岁的时候就怀孕并且结婚了。2. (艺术、文学、戏剧中的)传统做法,传统风格
In art, literature, or the theatre, a convention is a traditional method or style.e.g. We go offstage and come back for the convention of the encore.
按照加演的传统做法,我们走到后台后又再次返场。
e.g. ...the stylistic conventions of Egyptian art.
埃及艺术的传统风格3. (国家或组织间的)公约,协定,协约
A convention is an official agreement between countries or groups of people.e.g. ...the UN convention on climate change.
联合国有关气候变化的公约
e.g. ...the Geneva convention.
日内瓦公约4. (组织、政治团体的)大会,大型会议
A convention is a large meeting of an organization or political group.e.g. ...the annual convention of the Society of Professional Journalists.
职业新闻工作者协会年度大会
e.g. ...the Republican convention.
共和党代表大会 - schedule
名词时刻表,进度表; 清单,明细表; 预定计划; 目录
及物动词排定,安排; 将…列表; 为…作目录
1. 工作计划;日程安排
A schedule is a plan that gives a list of events or tasks and the times at which each one should happen or be done.e.g. He has been forced to adjust his schedule...
他被迫调整了自己的日程安排。
e.g. We both have such hectic schedules.
我们俩日程安排得都很紧。2. 计划的时间(或方式)
You can use schedule to refer to the time or way something is planned to be done. For example, if something is completed on schedule, it is completed at the time planned.e.g. The jet arrived in Johannesburg two minutes ahead of schedule...
喷气式飞机提前两分钟到达了约翰内斯堡。
e.g. Everything went according to schedule...
一切都按计划进行。3. (在时间上)安排,计划
If something is scheduled to happen at a particular time, arrangements are made for it to happen at that time.e.g. The space shuttle had been scheduled to blast off at 04:38...
航天飞机已经预定于凌晨 4 点 38 分发射升空。
e.g. A presidential election was scheduled for last December...
总统选举原计划在去年 12 月举行。4. (价格、细节或条件等的)一览表,明细表,清单
A schedule is a written list of things, for example a list of prices, details, or conditions.5. (火车、客轮、公共汽车或航班的)时刻表,时间表
A schedule is a list of all the times when trains, boats, buses, or aircraft are supposed to arrive at or leave a particular place.e.g. ...a bus schedule.
公共汽车时刻表in BRIT, usually use 英国英语通常用 timetable- calendar
名词日历; 历法; 日程表; (一年之中的)重大事件(或重要日期)一览表
及物动词把…记入日程表中; 把…列入表中; 为(文件等)作分类索引; 将…排入日程表
1. 日历;月历
A calendar is a chart or device which displays the date and the day of the week, and often the whole of a particular year divided up into months, weeks, and days.e.g. There was a calendar on the wall above, with large squares around the dates.
上面的墙上挂着日历,日期上画着大大的方框。2. 历法
A calendar is a particular system for dividing time into periods such as years, months, and weeks, often starting from a particular point in history.e.g. The Christian calendar was originally based on the Julian calendar of the Romans.
公历最初是以罗马人的儒略历为基础制定的。3. (某一组织、团体或个人的)日程表,纪事表,大事一览表
You can use calendar to refer to a series or list of events and activities which take place on particular dates, and which are important for a particular organization, community, or person.e.g. It is one of the British sporting calendar's most prestigious events...
这是英国体坛大事表上最负盛名的赛事之一。
e.g. Franklin joined her and the children whenever his crowded calendar allowed...
只要能从百忙之中抽出空,富兰克林就会陪在妻儿身边。- formal
形容词(学校教育或培训)正规的; 方式上的; 礼仪上的
名词美须穿礼服的社交集会; 口夜礼服
1. 正式的;规范的;庄重的
Formal speech or behaviour is very correct and serious rather than relaxed and friendly, and is used especially in official situations.e.g. He wrote a very formal letter of apology to Douglas...
他给道格拉斯写了一封非常正式的道歉信。
e.g. Business relationships are necessarily a bit more formal.
商业关系有必要更正式一些。formally
He took her back to Vincent Square in a taxi, saying goodnight formally on the doorstep.
他打车把她送回了文森特广场,并在门口正式道了晚安。- request
名词要求; 需要; 所请求的事物; 申请书
及物动词(下级对上级的)请求; 请求得到; 索取; 邀请[常接不定式或从句]
1. 请求;要求
If you request something, you ask for it politely or formally.e.g. Mr Dennis said he had requested access to a telephone...
丹尼斯先生说他已经请求使用电话。
e.g. She had requested that the door to her room be left open.
她要求不要关闭通向她房间的门。2. 请求…做;要求…做
If you request someone to do something, you politely or formally ask them to do it.e.g. They requested him to leave...
他们要求他离开。
e.g. Students are requested to park at the rear of the Department.
学生必须把车停在该系后面。3. 请求;要求
If you make a request, you politely or formally ask someone to do something.e.g. France had agreed to his request for political asylum...
法国已经同意了他寻求政治庇护的请求。
e.g. Vietnam made an official request that the meeting be postponed.
越南已经正式请求将会议推迟。4. 点播的乐曲
A request is a song or piece of music which someone has asked a performer or disc jockey to play.e.g. If you have any requests, I'd be happy to play them for you.
您点播任何歌曲,我都会很乐意为您演奏。5. 应邀;应…的请求;按照…的要求
If you do something at someone's request, you do it because they have asked you to.e.g. The evacuation is being organised at the request of the United Nations Secretary General.
根据联合国秘书长的要求,正在组织撤退。6. 一经要求;根据请求
If something is given or done on request, it is given or done whenever you ask for it.e.g. Leaflets giving details are available on request...
备有介绍详情的传单以供索取。
e.g. Chambermaids will bring an iron or hair dryer on request.
只要提出要求,清理房间的女服务员就会送来熨斗或电吹风。- arrangements
安排( arrangement的名词复数 );布置好的东西;约定;安排方式;
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- calendar