Module code: 365

📚 pathway 68985d5ec0704

Talking About Work – Essential Vocabulary and Phrases

Core PathWay

1 🌐 Introduction to 'Talking about work'

In today’s workplace, knowing how to talk about your position and duties is essential. Every day, we need to discuss our responsibilities with colleagues and managers. Sometimes we need to tell others about our schedule or explain our workload. We might need to talk about an important task or report that’s due soon. When we have a deadline coming up, we often need to ask for help or explain why we need more time. Understanding these words and how to use them helps us communicate better at work.

Key Terms

position
your job or role at work
duties
the things you must do as part of your job
responsibilities
the tasks you take care of at work
deadline
the time or date when work must be finished
workload
the amount of work you have to do

💬 Asking for Help with Work

Two colleagues in the office

Sarah: “Hi Tom, can you fill in for me at the 2:00 meeting?”
Tom: “Of course. What's the meeting about?”
Sarah: “It's about the new project. I need to hand in this report by 5:00.”
Tom: “I see. Do you have the meeting notes?”
Sarah: “Yes, I'll send them now. I have a lot to get through today.”
Tom: “No problem, I'll take over the meeting for you.”
Sarah: “Thanks Tom, you're a big help!”
Tom: “You're welcome. Good luck with the report!”

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2 🔬 The Key Phrases you need for 'Talking about work'

Common phrases for work situations:

hand in – to give completed work to someone
Example: ‘I will hand in my report tomorrow.’

fill in for – to do someone else’s job temporarily
Example: ‘Can you fill in for me at the meeting?’

catch up on – to complete work you missed
Example: ‘I need to catch up on my emails.’

get through – to finish a lot of work
Example: ‘I must get through these papers today.’

work on – to spend time doing a task
Example: ‘I’m working on the new project.’

deal with – to handle or manage something
Example: ‘I will deal with the customer’s problem.’

look after – to be responsible for something
Example: ‘Who looks after the office supplies?’

take over – to become responsible for something
Example: ‘Sarah will take over the project next week.’

keep up with – to stay current with work
Example: ‘It’s hard to keep up with all the changes.’

put off – to delay doing something
Example: ‘Don’t put off writing your report.’

💬 Discussing Workload

Employee talking to manager

Employee: “I'm trying to keep up with all my tasks.”
Manager: “Which project is giving you trouble?”
Employee: “I need to catch up on the monthly reports.”
Manager: “Let's look at your schedule together.”
Employee: “I have three reports to finish by Friday.”
Manager: “OK. Do you want help from the team?”
Employee: “Yes, please. That will help a lot.”
Manager: “I'll ask John to help you tomorrow.”

Join YSP to Practice ThisThis AI Driven Dialogue Practice is a YSP Members Feature – Click the button to see the benefits of YSP membership

3 🔍 Other Key Terms for 'Talking about work'

Important work-related words:

colleague – a person you work with
Example: ‘My colleague helps me with difficult tasks.’

schedule – a plan that shows when things happen
Example: ‘My schedule is very busy this week.’

task – a piece of work that needs to be done
Example: ‘I have many tasks to finish today.’

report – a document that gives information about something
Example: ‘The report is due on Friday.’

meeting – when people come together to discuss work
Example: ‘We have a team meeting every Monday.’

project – a big piece of work with many parts
Example: ‘The new project starts next month.’

team – a group of people working together
Example: ‘Our team has six people.’

4 🧠 Worth Thinking About

Did you know that in different countries, people talk about work in different ways? In some places, it’s normal to say exactly what you think. In others, people prefer to be less direct. Also, the time people start work can be very different. Some offices start at 7:00, others at 10:00! Understanding these differences helps us work better with people from other countries.

📝 Key Vocabulary Recap

positionyour job or role at work
dutiesthe things you must do as part of your job
responsibilitiesthe tasks you take care of at work
deadlinethe time or date when work must be finished
colleaguea person you work with
schedulea plan that shows when things happen
workloadthe amount of work you have to do
taska piece of work that needs to be done
reporta document that gives information about something
meetingwhen people come together to discuss work
projecta big piece of work with many parts
teama group of people working together
hand into give completed work to someone
fill in forto do someone else's job temporarily
catch up onto complete work you missed
get throughto finish a lot of work
work onto spend time doing a task
deal withto handle or manage something
look afterto be responsible for something
take overto become responsible for something
keep up withto stay current with work
put offto delay doing something
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