Going Shopping in English Spoken English for Travel

Hi, I’m Marie.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn useful language
for going shopping in English.

You’ll see how to ask for things you want,
how to talk about prices and discounts, how

to arrange delivery, and how to take something
back to a shop.

Before we start, don’t forget to visit our
website: Oxford Online English dot com.

Do you need to improve your English?

We have lots of resources for you: free video
lessons, quizzes, free listening lessons,

and more!

We also have many professional teachers who
offer online classes; you can improve your

spoken English, learn about English grammar,
or prepare for IELTS with one of our teachers.

But now, let’s see how you can use English
when you go shopping.

Hello, do you need any help?

Yes, I’ve found this blue jacket, but I
can only find L and XL sizes.

Do you have it in a medium?

I’m afraid we’re sold out, but we do have
the same style in brown.

It’s just over here.

Ah…

Yes, that’s nice, too, but I really like
the blue.

Will you be getting any more in?

Unfortunately not.

It’s the end of the season, so we’re getting
some new styles in from next week.

The ones you see here are the last we have
in stock.

If you want, you could check our website;
it might be possible to order it online.

Thanks, but I need something for a party this
weekend, plus I don’t like to buy clothes

without trying them on first.

Sure, I understand.

Would you like to try the brown one on?

Yes, sure.

Where do I go?

The changing rooms are just over there.

In the dialogue, you heard some useful language
related to buying clothing.

If you can’t find what you need in a shop,
what could you say?

In the dialogue, you heard, ‘Do you have
it in a medium?’

You could use this question in other ways.

For example: ‘Do you have this in a small?’

‘Do you have this top in green?’

You could also use ‘I’m looking for…’
to say what you want.

For example: ‘I’m looking for a formal
dress to wear to a wedding.’

Or: ‘I’m looking for some running shoes.’

Next, look at three phrases from the dialogue.

Could you explain what they mean?

‘Sold out’ means that they’ve sold everything,
so this product isn’t available any more.

For example, if you say that ‘Tickets for
the concert have sold out’, you mean that

all the tickets have been sold, and you can’t
buy tickets now.

‘Get in’ is a phrasal verb which can mean
‘have a product delivered’.

It’s generally used to talk about shops
and products which they sell.

For example, a shop assistant might say, ‘We’re
getting more sizes in next Monday.’

That means that new products will be delivered
next Monday, and you’ll be able to find

a wider range of sizes.

‘In stock’ means available, so you can
buy the thing.

The opposite is ‘out of stock’.

If a shop assistant says ‘We’re out of
stock at the moment’, he or she is telling

you that the product isn’t available.

Next, let’s see how you can talk about prices,
deals and discounts when shopping.

Excuse me?

Yes?

I’m interested in buying these chairs, but
I can’t see a price tag.

Can you tell me how much they are?

Sure, let me check…

] Forty-nine ninety-nine each, or one hundred
and eighty-five ninety-nine for the set of

four.

That seems strange.

I saw an advertisement that said they’re
buy one get one free.

Ah!

That’s a different product.

I know the ones you mean; they’re just over
here.

Right!

That’s what I was looking for.

So, how much are these?

One is seventy-nine ninety-nine, or two nine
nine ninety-nine for a set of four.

Of course, with the buy one get one offer,
you can buy two for seventy-nine ninety-nine,

or four for… what would that be?

One sixty.

Perfect!

I’ll take the set of four.

What do I do?

Is there a catalogue number?

Yes, just write down the number which is here,
or take a picture with your phone.

Pay at the cash register, then go to the collection
point to get your products.

I almost forgot: I have a loyalty card.

Does that mean I get a 5% discount?

Normally, yes, but your loyalty discount can’t
be used with other offers like this.

Yeah, that’s what I thought.

Anyway, thanks for your help!

If you want to know how much something costs,
you can ask a simple question: ‘How much

is…?’ or ‘How much are…?’

For example: ‘How much are these shoes?’

‘How much is this tablet?’

You could also ask in a slightly more formal
way, as in: ‘Can you tell me how much … are?’

or ‘Can you tell me how much … is?’

For example: ‘Can you tell me how much these
trousers are?’

‘Can you tell me how much this electric
toothbrush is?’

In spoken English, people sometimes don’t
read full numbers, especially numbers between

one hundred and one thousand.

Instead, they break the number into parts.

So, instead of ‘four hundred (and) forty-nine’,
you might hear ‘four-four-nine’.

This doesn’t happen all the time, but it’s
not unusual, either.

For numbers above one thousand, the number
is often broken into two parts.

So, instead of ‘one thousand two hundred
(and) seventy-five’, you might hear ‘twelve

seventy-five’, or even ‘twelve seven five’.

In the dialogue, the shop assistant said that
a set of four chairs would cost two nine nine

ninety-nine.

Two nine nine ninety-nine.

What does this mean?

Can you write down the number?

Let’s do some more practice with this quickly.

You’re going to hear five prices, which
might use the conversational style you just

saw.

After you hear each price, pause the video
and write down the number.

You’ll see the answers at the end.

Ready?

Let’s start!

Three-two-five fifty.

Fifteen sixty-nine.

Ten ninety-nine.

Eight eight eight thirty.

Two four nine nine.

How was that?

Difficult?

If so, don’t worry!

Rewind the video and listen once more.

You’ll see the answers in a second.

How did you do?

Could you hear the prices correctly?

Understanding numbers, especially when people
read the numbers in this conversational way,

can really help you when you’re shopping
in an English-speaking country.

Next, let’s look at another common task
when you’re shopping: arranging delivery.

Yes, can I help?

Well…

I’ve just bought this TV…

Yes?

And…

It’s much bigger than I expected.

I’m not sure it’ll fit in my car.

Do you offer a delivery service?

Yes, of course!

I’m surprised they didn’t mention it to
you when you paid.

That’s great!

So, what do I do?

Can I take your receipt, please?

Of course; here you are.

Let me see…

The earliest we could deliver it would be
next Wednesday.

Does that work for you?

I’m at work during the week.

Do you deliver at weekends?

We can deliver on Saturdays, but there’s
a four-pound charge.

That’s fine.

So, next Saturday, the 29th?

That works, but what time will it be?

We deliver between ten AM and four PM.

You can’t give me a more specific time than
that?

I’m afraid not.

All of our delivery slots are six hours.

I guess I’ll have to take it, then.

OK, so you just need to pay the weekend delivery
charge, and then we can set everything up

for you.

Can I pay by card?

Of course.

Of course, it’s more common nowadays to
order things online and have them delivered

to your home.

But maybe you want to see your new TV screen
in action, try out your new sofa, or check

that your new table will match your living
room.

In this case, you might need to arrange a
delivery in the shop.

To do this, you could ask: ‘Can I have this
delivered?’

‘Do you offer a delivery service?’

‘Can you deliver this to my house?’

Quick quiz: you heard one of these three questions
in the dialogue.

Which one?

You heard the second one.

However, they all have the same meaning.

You can use any of them!

You might also need to ask more specific questions
about the delivery, like: ‘Do you deliver

at weekends?’

‘What time will it be?’

‘Do you have any slots available next Friday?’

‘Does weekend delivery cost extra?’

What does that word ‘slot’ mean?

A ‘slot’ is a time period when something
can happen.

Often, a shop or company will give you a delivery
slot, for example from nine in the morning

to two in the afternoon.

You know your delivery will arrive sometime
in that window, but you don’t know exactly

when.

Now, you can ask about availability, ask about
prices, and arrange a delivery if you need

it.

But, what if you have a problem with something
you bought in a shop?

Hello, what can I do for you?

Hi, yes, I bought these jeans last week, and
I’d like to return them.

Do you have your receipt?

Yes, here you are.

Was anything wrong with the jeans?

No, no problem, they’re just the wrong size.

They’re too small.

Would you like to exchange them for a larger
size?

I can check if we have them in stock.

No, thank you.

I decided that I don’t like the style so
much, either.

Is it possible to get a refund?

Of course.

Do you have the card you paid with?

Can’t I get cash?

I’m sorry, but we can only issue a refund
to the card you paid with.

Alternatively, we can offer you gift vouchers
for the same amount.

Fine, put it on the card, then.

No problem.

At the start of the dialogue, you heard: ‘I
bought these jeans last week, and I’d like

to return them.’

‘Return’ could mean different things.

Generally, you can replace something, meaning
you get another of the same thing.

For example, if you buy a new phone, and it
doesn’t work when you take it out of the

box, you might ask to replace it—you get
a new version of the same phone.

You could also ask to exchange the product
you bought, meaning you give back the one

you bought, and take a different one, instead.

Maybe you bought some clothes, but then you
decided they don’t look as good as you hoped,

and you want to take something different.

Finally, you can ask for a refund, and get
your money back.

When you take something back to a shop, you
might hear questions like: ‘Do you have

your receipt?’

‘Was anything wrong with …?’
‘Would you like to exchange it for something

else?’

Let’s do a quick practice.

Look at six answers, which belong with these
three questions.

Can you match the answers to the questions?

Pause the video and think about your answers.

Ready?

Let’s look!

Remember that you can always go back and rewatch
the dialogues or any section of this video

if you need more practice with these words
and phrases.

Here’s a question for you: what do you like
or dislike most about going shopping?

Have you ever had a problem with something
you bought in a shop?

What happened?

Share your experiences in the comments, and
practise your written English!

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

你好,我是玛丽。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您可以学习用
英语购物的有用语言。

你会看到如何索要你想要的东西,
如何谈论价格和折扣,

如何安排送货,以及如何把东西
带回商店。

在开始之前,别忘了访问我们的
网站:Oxford Online English dot com。

你需要提高你的英语吗?

我们为您提供大量资源:免费视频
课程、测验、免费听力课程

等等!

我们还有很多专业的老师
提供在线课程; 您可以与我们的一位老师一起提高您

的英语口语、学习英语语法
或准备雅思。

但是现在,让我们看看
你在购物时如何使用英语。

您好,请问您需要什么帮助吗?

是的,我找到了这件蓝色夹克,但我
只能找到 L 和 XL 码。

你有媒体吗?

恐怕我们卖光了,但我们确实
有相同的棕色款式。

就在这里。

啊……

是的,那也很好,但我真的很
喜欢蓝色。

你会再进去吗?

不幸的是没有。

现在是本季的尾声,所以我们
将从下周开始推出一些新款式。

你在这里看到的是我们最后
的库存。

如果您愿意,可以查看我们的网站;
可能可以在线订购。

谢谢,但是这个周末我需要一些东西来参加派对
,而且我不喜欢

不先试穿就买衣服。

当然,我明白。

你想试试棕色的吗?

是的,当然。

我要去哪?

更衣室就在那边。

在对话中,你听到了一些
与买衣服有关的有用语言。

如果你在商店里找不到你需要的
东西,你能说什么?

在对话中,你听到,“你
有媒体吗?”

你可以用其他方式使用这个问题。

例如:“你有这个小号的吗?”

“你有这个绿色的上衣吗?”

你也可以用“我在找……”
来表达你想要的。

例如:“我正在寻找一件正式的
礼服来参加婚礼。”

或者:“我正在寻找一些跑鞋。”

接下来,看对话中的三个短语。

你能解释一下它们的意思吗?

“售罄”意味着他们已经卖完了所有东西,
所以这个产品不再可用了。

比如你说“
演唱会的票已经卖完了”,就是说

所有的票都卖完了,现在买不到
票了。

“进入”是一个短语动词,可以表示
“交付产品”。

它通常用于谈论
他们销售的商店和产品。

例如,店员可能会说,“我们
下周一会有更多尺码。”

这意味着新产品将
在下周一发货,您将能够

找到更多尺码。

“有货”是指有货,所以你可以
买东西。

相反的是“缺货”。

如果店员说“我们
目前缺货”,他或她是在告诉

您该产品不可用。

接下来,让我们看看购物时如何谈论价格、
优惠和折扣。

打扰一下?

是的?

我有兴趣购买这些椅子,但
我看不到价格标签。

你能告诉我它们是多少吗?

当然,让我检查一下……

] 每人四十九九十九,或者四人一组的
一百八十五九十九

这似乎很奇怪。

我看到一个广告说他们
买一送一。

啊!

那是一个不同的产品。

我知道你的意思; 他们就在
这里。

对!

这就是我一直在寻找的。

那么,这些是多少?

一个是七十九九十九,或
二九九九十九为一组四人。

当然,买一送一的优惠,
你可以七十九九十九买两件,

或者四件……那是什么?

一六十。

完美的!

我要四人一组。

我该怎么办?

有目录号吗?

是的,只需写下此处的号码,
或用手机拍照即可。

在收银台付款,然后去收集
点取货。

我差点忘了:我有一张会员卡。

这是否意味着我可以获得 5% 的折扣?

通常,是的,但您的忠诚度折扣
不能与此类其他优惠一起使用。

是的,我就是这么想的。

无论如何,感谢您的帮助!

如果您想知道某样东西的价格,
您可以问一个简单的问题:“

……多少钱?”或“……多少钱?”

例如:“这双鞋

多少钱?”“这款平板电脑多少钱? '

你也可以用稍微正式一点的
方式问,比如:‘你能告诉我……是多少吗?’

或’你能告诉我……是多少吗?'

例如:‘你能告诉我这条裤子多少钱
是吗?” “

你能告诉我这个电动牙刷多少钱
吗?”

在英语口语中,人们有时看
不懂完整的数字,尤其

是 10 到 1000 之间的数字。

相反,他们将数字分成几部分。

因此,您可能会听到“四四九”而不是“四百(和)
四十九”。

这种情况并非一直发生,但也
并不罕见。

对于一千以上的数字,该数字
通常分为两部分。

因此
,您可能听到的不是“一千二百(和)七十五”,而是“十二

七十五”,甚至是“十二七五”。

在对话中,店员说
一套四把椅子要二九

九九十九。

二九九九十九。

这是什么意思?

你能写下号码吗?

让我们快速做一些练习。

您将听到五个价格,这
可能使用您刚刚看到的会话风格

听到每个价格后,暂停视频
并记下数字。

你会在最后看到答案。

准备好?

开始吧!

三二五五十。

十五六十九。

十点九十九分。

八八八三十。

二四九九。

怎么样?

难的?

如果是这样,请不要担心!

倒回视频并再次收听。

你会在一秒钟内看到答案。

你是怎么做的?

你能正确听到价格吗?

了解数字,尤其是当人们
以这种对话方式阅读数字时,

在您在英语国家购物时可以真正帮助您

接下来,让我们看看
购物时的另一个常见任务:安排送货。

是的,我可以帮忙吗?

嗯……

我刚买了这台电视……

是吗?

而且……

它比我预期的要大得多。

我不确定它是否适合我的车。

你们提供送货服务吗?

当然是!

我很惊讶他们
在您付款时没有向您提及。

那太棒了!

那么,我该怎么办?

请问我可以拿你的收据吗?

当然; 这个给你。

让我看看

……我们最早可以
在下周三交付。

那对你有用吗?

我在一周内工作。

你们周末送货吗?

我们可以在星期六送货,但要
收取 4 英镑的费用。

没关系。

那么,下周六,29 号?

这行得通,但它会是什么时候?

我们在上午 10 点到下午 4 点之间送货。

你不能给我一个更具体的时间
吗?

恐怕不是。

我们所有的交货时段都是六个小时。

我想我必须接受它,那么。

好的,所以您只需要支付周末送货
费,然后我们就可

以为您安排好一切。

我可以用卡付款吗?

当然。

当然,如今更常见的是
在线订购商品并将它们

送到您家。

但也许你想看看你的新电视屏幕
在运行,试试你的新沙发,或者

检查你的新桌子是否适合你的
客厅。

在这种情况下,您可能需要
在商店安排送货。

要做到这一点,你可以问:“我可以把这个
送到吗?”

“你们提供送货服务吗?”

“你能把这个送到我家吗?”

快速测验:你在对话中听到了这三个问题
之一。

哪一个?

你听到了第二个。

但是,它们都具有相同的含义。

你可以使用它们中的任何一个!

您可能还需要就送货提出更具体的问题
,例如:“

周末送货吗?”“几点钟?”“

下周五有空位吗?”“

周末送货是否需要额外收费?”

“插槽”这个词是什么意思?

“时段”是可能发生某事的时间段

通常,商店或公司会给您一个送货
时间,例如从早上九点

到下午两点。

您知道您的交货将
在该窗口的某个时间到达,但您不知道确切的

时间。

现在,您可以询问可用性、询问
价格并在需要时安排送货

但是,如果
你在商店买的东西有问题怎么办?

你好,需要帮忙吗?

嗨,是的,我上周买了这条牛仔裤,
我想退货。

你有收据吗?

好的给你。

牛仔裤有什么问题吗?

不,没问题,它们只是尺寸不对。

他们太小了。

你想把它们换成更大的
吗?

我可以检查我们是否有库存。

不,谢谢。

我决定我也不太喜欢这种风格

是否有可能获得退款?

当然。

你有你支付的卡吗?

我不能拿现金吗?

很抱歉,我们只能
向您支付的卡退款。

或者,我们可以为您
提供相同金额的礼券。

好吧,那就把它放在卡片上吧。

没问题。

在对话开始时,你听到:“我
上周买了这条牛仔裤,我

想退货。”

“退货”可能意味着不同的东西。

通常,您可以替换某些东西,这意味着
您可以得到另一个相同的东西。

例如,如果您购买了一部新手机,
但当您将其从包装盒中取出时却无法使用

,您可能会要求更换它——您将获得
同一部手机的新版本。

您也可以要求交换
您购买的产品,这意味着您将购买的产品退还

,并换取另一件。

也许你买了一些衣服,但后来你
觉得它们看起来不像你希望的那么好

,你想买一些不同的东西。

最后,您可以要求退款,并
取回您的钱。

当你把东西带回商店时,你
可能会听到这样的问题:“你

有收据吗?”

“……有什么问题吗?”
“你想把它换成别的

东西吗?”

让我们快速练习一下。

看六个答案,属于这
三个问题。

你能匹配问题的答案吗?

暂停视频并思考你的答案。

准备好?

我们看看吧!

请记住,如果您需要更多练习这些单词和短语,您可以随时返回并重新观看
此视频的对话或任何部分

这里有一个问题要问你:你
最喜欢或最不喜欢去购物什么?

你在商店买的东西有没有遇到过问题

发生了什么?

在评论中分享您的经验,并
练习您的书面英语!

感谢收看!

下次见!