10 Business English Expressions You Need To Know Vocabulary

Hello! I’m Emma from mmmEnglish.

English in the workplace.

At work, in the office.

Knowing the idioms, phrasal verbs

and unique vocabulary that’s

used in these professional contexts is so important!

I’ll admit that there is a lot to learn there.

But today I want to focus on some really common,

very useful expressions that you’ll hear often at work

and in these professional contexts .

At the office. With your colleagues.

With your boss. With your clients, your customers.

In interviews, speaking exams, with your teacher

or your university professor.

If you haven’t already noticed, you’ll soon realise

that the office is where idioms and English expressions

go wild.

At times it feels like people only speak

using idioms and slang.

So whether you’re flat out, getting off-track,

losing your train of thought or banking on an early finish,

these 10 essential business English expressions

will help you to sound more natural and confident

at work.

Learning these expressions is essential

and a fantastic way to hear them being used in context

is by listening to audiobooks.

I use Audible to listen to books all the time

and I’ve teamed up with them to offer you a free trial,

a free audiobook for 30 days,

so that you can try it out yourself!

I’ve been using Audible for years now

but while I don’t often have time to sit and read a book,

I can listen while I’m driving

or while I’m going for a run or I’m waiting for the train.

So they offer a really fantastic solution

to keep practising your English and for this lesson,

I’ve listed some fantastic books relating to business

in the description box below.

So you can check out my recommendations for Audible

right there.

So let’s start with “flat out”.

If you’re “flat out”, you’re incredibly busy,

you have lots to do,

so much that you can’t stop to have a break.

I’ll be flat out next week

because there’s a new shipment arriving.

I’ve been flat out all week, I’m exhausted!

In Australia where I’m from, we might also use

“flat chat”.

It’s used in exactly the same way

to mean that someone is very busy.

Train of thought.

Have you ever been talking about something and then

completely forgotten what you’re talking about

and why you’re talking about it.

It happens to me more often than I’d like to admit

but this happens when your train of thought

gets distracted by something else.

The clear progression of your thoughts are stopped

by something.

So the expression that you’ll most commonly hear is

“Oh! I’ve lost my train of thought!

What was I talking about?”

I’ve lost my train of thought.

My mum called and

completely disrupted my train of thought.

Can I ask you a question?

Just give me a minute,

I don’t want to disrupt my train of thought.

Now if you lose your train of thought you’ll need to

get back on track.

If something is on track, it’s happening as it should be

there’s no problem at all.

If something is not happening as you planned and

you want to change it, you want to get back on track.

We missed the deadline last week,

but we’ve just submitted the report now,

so we’re getting back on track.

Are you on track to complete the report

by the end of the week?

So logically, if something is not on track it’s not

happening as it should be, then you’re off track.

Imagine this, you’re busy, you’re flat out,

and you have to attend a meeting about a project

that you’re working on.

But the people at the meeting are not prepared

and the conversation is just going everywhere!

People are talking about their kids, what they had for

dinner last night, any other issue

except what you should be talking about.

So you decide to interrupt the conversation and say:

We’re getting off track here guys.

We’ve only got ten more minutes left

and we need to confirm the marketing budget.

It’s used to say that a person or a group of people

have become distracted from their main purpose.

They’ve lost their focus.

That’s just like my aunt Mary actually,

she does it all the time!

She lives on her own which is probably why

but her house is beautiful and she’s got

the dogs to keep her company.

Sorry, I’m getting off track!

Here are a few more examples.

It’s difficult to stay on track with so many disruptions,

perhaps we should move to the conference room.

I don’t want to get off track, but we can all agree that the

new marketing manager is difficult to get along with.

We should have completed the work by now,

but the team got off track with some technical issues.

This idiom also has a literal meaning.

To get lost or lose your direction.

To literally get off the track and here,

a track means a path or a road.

So if you’re off the track, you’re not on the road,

on the path that you need to be on.

To bank on.

To bank on something means to bet

that something will happen in a certain way.

To be really sure

or confident that something will happen

So for example.

I’m banking on Sarah to get a promotion,

so that I can apply for her position.

Since it’s a public holiday on Monday,

we’re banking on an early finish tonight.

It can also be used in a negative sentence,

often advising someone against something.

I wouldn’t bank on it.

That means it’s not a good idea

to assume that it will happen.

To brush up on.

This is a phrasal verb, but one that’s idiomatic

and it means to update or to improve your skills

in some way.

It can be used in any context really, formal or informal,

but this expression is

so useful in a professional context

because sometimes it can be a little awkward or

embarrassing to say that you don’t have fantastic skills

in one area.

Right?

But by saying that you need to brush up on those skills

is a much softer way of saying that you’re

not that good at something but you are willing to

practise or study to improve those skills.

I’m brushing up on my Italian

because I’ve got a business trip in July.

I got the job at the publishing company!

But I really need to brush up on my editing skills.

I’m out of practice!

To bring something to the table.

So this idiom means to provide something

that will be of benefit. Something useful.

And it’s often used in a professional context

to describe the skills or experience that someone

brings to a team or to a company.

The great thing about Sam is that she brings

years of management experience to the table.

See how the “something” in our structure is

a noun phrase here.

This is really common with this expression.

He brings excellent communication skills and

award-winning design experience to the table.

But during a meeting you might also hear

someone use this expression.

What have you brought to the table?

And that means what suggestions or ideas did you

bring to the meeting, can you offer to the people

in the meeting.

To bring up.

Now this is a very common phrasal verb.

You’ve probably heard it before.

It means to mention or introduce a topic.

Someone can bring something up during a meeting,

a call or a casual conversation.

I’ll bring it up with Stephanie when I see her next week.

Our presentation is missing some of the key points.

So I’m going to bring it up with the team tomorrow,

we can spend some more time on it.

To turn down.

Again, this is another common phrasal verb

but it’s also idiomatic.

It means to say no to something or refuse something.

They offered me tickets to the conference,

but I had to turn them down

because it’s my son’s birthday.

He turned it down

because they offered him the promotion,

but told him that they couldn’t increase his salary.

I applied for the position but then I found out

I had to spend six months of the year

living in New Zealand. So I had to turn them down.

Now when you do something without planning

or preparing for it,

there are a couple of useful expressions

that you can use.

You can say that you’ll “wing it”.

My presentation’s on my laptop,

which I left at home, I’ll just have to wing it.

If you haven’t received the notes,

you’ll just have to wing it.

Usually this idiom suggests that you didn’t really plan it

to be that way but for some reason,

you’re under-prepared.

If you do something that’s off-the-cuff,

you’re doing something without preparing for it

but you’re kind of comfortable with that

you’re cool with that.

I wish that I was confident enough to make

presentations off-the-cuff,

I spend so much time

planning for our monthly board meetings.

Paul won an award last night

and made a fantastic speech totally

totally off-the-cuff!

Well that’s it for this lesson,

I hope you learnt some new expressions.

Remember that these expressions are often used in a

professional context

but not only in a professional context.

You’ll often hear them used in casual, informal contexts

as well, so they’re good ones to learn and practise.

You guys know that I release new lessons every week,

so make sure you subscribe by clicking that red button

down there so you never miss one of my lessons!

There are plenty of other video lessons

right here on the mmmEnglish Youtube Channel

for you to check out.

Like this playlist here of English idioms

and this one right here.

Thanks for watching and I’ll see you next week.

Bye for now!

你好! 我是来自 mmmEnglish 的 Emma。

工作场所的英语。

在工作中,在办公室。

了解在这些专业环境中使用的成语、短语动词

和独特的词汇

非常重要!

我承认那里有很多东西要学。

但今天我想重点介绍一些

您在工作中和这些专业环境中经常听到的非常常见、非常有用的表达方式

在办公室里。 和你的同事。

和你的老板。 与您的客户,您的客户。

在面试,口语考试中,与你的老师

或大学教授。

如果您还没有注意到,您很快就会意识到

,办公室是成语和英语表达的

发源地。

有时感觉就像人们只

使用成语和俚语说话。

因此,无论您是一头雾水、偏离轨道、

迷失思路还是希望早日完成,

这 10 种基本商务英语表达方式

都将帮助您在工作中听起来更自然、更自信

学习这些表达方式是必不可少

的,听有声读物是在上下文中听到它们的绝佳方式

我一直用 Audible 来听书

,我和他们合作为您提供免费试用

,免费有声读物 30 天,

让您自己尝试!

我已经使用 Audible 多年了,

但虽然我不经常有时间坐着看书,

但我可以在

开车、跑步或等火车时听 .

所以他们提供了一个非常棒的解决方案

来继续练习你的英语,在本课中,

我在下面的描述框中列出了一些与商业相关的精彩书籍

所以你可以在那里查看我对 Audible 的建议

所以让我们从“平淡”开始。

如果你“精疲力竭”,你会非常忙碌,

你有很多事情要做,

以至于你不能停下来休息一下。

下周我会很忙,

因为有新货到了。

我已经整整一个星期了,我筋疲力尽了!

在我来自的澳大利亚,我们也可以使用

“平面聊天”。

它以完全相同的方式

用于表示某人很忙。

思路。

您是否曾经在谈论某事,然后

完全忘记您在谈论什么

以及为什么谈论它。

它发生在我身上的频率比我想承认的要多,

但是当你的思路

被其他事情分散注意力时就会发生这种情况。

你思想的清晰进展

被某些东西阻止了。

所以你最常听到的表达是

“哦!我失去了思路!

我在说什么?”

我已经失去了思路。

妈妈打来电话,

彻底打乱了我的思路。

我可以问你一个问题吗?

给我一分钟,

我不想打乱我的思路。

现在,如果您失去思路,您将需要

回到正轨。

如果某件事在轨道上,它正在发生,它应该是

完全没有问题的。

如果某些事情没有按您的计划发生并且

您想改变它,您希望回到正轨。

上周我们错过了最后期限,

但我们现在刚刚提交了报告,

所以我们正在重回正轨。

您是否

按计划在本周末完成报告?

所以从逻辑上讲,如果某件事没有走上正轨,它就没有

按照应有的方式发生,那么你就偏离了正轨。

想象一下,你很忙,你很累

,你必须参加一个关于

你正在从事的项目的会议。

但会议上的人都没有准备好

,谈话到处都是!

人们在谈论他们的孩子,他们

昨晚吃的晚餐,

除了你应该谈论的任何其他问题。

所以你决定打断谈话并说:

伙计们,我们走错了路。

我们只剩下十分钟了

,我们需要确认营销预算。

过去常说一个人或一群人

已经从他们的主要目的分心了。

他们已经失去了注意力。

这就像我的玛丽阿姨一样,

她一直都这样做!

她独自生活,这可能就是为什么,

但她的房子很漂亮,而且她

有狗来陪伴她。

对不起,我跑题了!

这里还有几个例子。

有这么多干扰很难保持正常,

也许我们应该搬到会议室。

我不想偏离轨道,但我们都同意

新的营销经理很难相处。

我们现在应该已经完成了工作,

但是团队因为一些技术问题而偏离了轨道。

这个成语也有字面意思。

迷路或迷失方向。

从字面上看,在这里

,轨道意味着路径或道路。

所以,如果你偏离了轨道,你就不是在路上,不是在

你需要走的路上。

存钱。

寄希望于某事意味着

打赌某事会以某种方式发生。

真正确定

或确信某事会

发生 例如。

我指望莎拉升职,

这样我就可以申请她的职位。

由于周一是公共假期,

我们希望今晚能早日完成。

它也可以用在否定句中,

通常建议某人反对某事。

我不会指望它。

这意味着

假设它会发生并不是一个好主意。

刷上去。

这是一个短语动词,但它是惯用的

,它意味着以某种方式更新或提高你的技能

它实际上可以在任何情况下使用,正式或非正式的,

但这种表达方式

在专业环境中非常有用,

因为有时

说您在某个领域没有出色的技能可能会有点尴尬或尴尬

对?

但是说你需要复习这些技能

是一种更温和的说法,即你

不擅长某事,但你愿意

练习或学习以提高这些技能。

我正在复习我的意大利语,

因为我在七月份出差。

我得到了出版公司的工作!

但我真的需要提高我的编辑技巧。

我没有练习了!

把东西带到桌子上。

所以这个成语的意思是提供

一些有益的东西。 有用的东西。

它通常在专业环境中

用于描述某人

为团队或公司带来的技能或经验。

Sam 的伟大之处在于她将

多年的管理经验带到了桌面上。

看看我们结构中的“某物”如何在

这里成为名词短语。

这种表达方式很常见。

他带来了出色的沟通技巧和

屡获殊荣的设计经验。

但在会议期间,您可能还会听到

有人使用这种表达方式。

你带来了什么?

这意味着你

给会议带来了什么建议或想法,你能提供给会议的人吗

提出来。

现在这是一个非常常见的短语动词。

你可能以前听说过。

它的意思是提及或介绍一个话题。

有人可以在会议

、通话或随意交谈中提出一些问题。

下周见到斯蒂芬妮时,我会向她提出。

我们的演示文稿缺少一些关键点。

所以我明天会和团队一起提出这个问题,

我们可以多花点时间。

掉头向下。

同样,这是另一个常见的短语动词,

但它也是惯用的。

意思是对某事说不或拒绝某事。

他们给了我参加会议的门票,

但我不得不拒绝,

因为今天是我儿子的生日。

他拒绝了,

因为他们为他提供了晋升机会,

但告诉他他们不能增加他的薪水。

我申请了这个职位,但后来我发现

我一年

中必须在新西兰生活六个月。 所以我不得不拒绝他们。

现在,当您在没有计划或准备的情况下做某事时

,可以使用一些有用的表达方式

你可以说你会“振作起来”。

我的演示文稿在我

留在家里的笔记本电脑上,我只需要随身携带即可。

如果您还没有收到笔记,

您只需将其发送出去。

通常这个成语表明你并没有真正计划

这样做,但由于某种原因,

你准备不足。

如果你做一些即兴的

事情,你就是在做一些事情而没有做任何准备,

但你对你很酷的感觉很舒服

我希望我有足够的信心做

即兴演讲,

我花了很多时间来

计划我们每月的董事会会议。

保罗昨晚获得了一个奖项,

并发表了一场完全即兴表演的精彩演讲

好了,这节课就到这里了,

我希望你能学到一些新的表达方式。

请记住,这些表达方式通常在

专业环境中使用,

但不仅在专业环境中使用。

您也会经常听到它们在随意、非正式的环境

中使用,因此它们是学习和练习的好方法。

你们知道我每周都会发布新课程,

所以请确保您点击下方的红色按钮进行订阅

,这样您就不会错过我的任何课程! mmmEnglish Youtube 频道上

还有许多其他视频课程

供您查看。

就像这里的英语习语播放列表和这里的播放列表一样

感谢收看,我们下周见。

暂时再见!