How To Ask for Help in English Common Expressions spon

Hello I’m Emma from mmmEnglish!

Are you here for some help with your English?

Probably.

Well, you’re in the right place!

You just need to ask

and there are so

many different ways to ask for help in English.

In this lesson,

I’m going to share some common expressions

and collocations to help you

confidently ask for help in English.

I’ll be talking about which

modal verbs you can use when asking for help

and I’ll also share

some really common expressions with you.

Like, to give or lend someone a hand,

to help someone out,

to do someone a favour,

or even this one

I could use some help.

All of these expressions will be useful

when asking for help from an native English speaker.

Speaking of helping someone out,

have you heard of the HiNative app?

By using it you can get help

from native English speakers and

help other people out who are learning your

native language.

It’s an app that works just like a language exchange

between native speakers of just about any language.

You can ask a question and other native speakers

in the community will help you to answer it.

So you know sometimes you come across

English phrases that you just can’t find in a dictionary.

Some random line from a movie or

some weird song lyrics.

HiNative can get you the answers

when a dictionary can’t.

So let’s say you’re Spanish and

you heard some words in an English song that you just

don’t really understand.

I’ll be loungin' on the couch just chillin' in my Snuggie.

It’s like having a native English-speaking friend

that you can ask for help at any time!

You type your question and a native English speaker

will write back to you,

usually in just a couple of minutes.

You can even upload a voice recording to get feedback

on your pronunciation.

Chilling means relax.

A Snuggie is a brand of super comfortable clothing,

a little bit like a blanket.

So chillin' in my Snuggie means

to relax whilst wearing my Snuggie.

Cool!

When other people learning your native language

have questions, then you can help them out too!

It’s so cool! It’s free to download

and it works on any smartphone!

Getting help from native English speakers is a

piece of cake with HiNative!

So when you need help, how can you ask for it?

Well let’s start with the basics.

There are a few modal verbs that are really helpful

when asking for help.

Can,

“can you help me?”

which means are you able to help?

Could,

“could you help me?”

which means is it possible for you to help?

Or would, “would you help me?”

which means are you willing to help?

Other modal verbs are possible too but these three

are the most common ones when asking for help.

If you need to be really polite when asking for help

like when you’re talking to a colleague

or your boss or a customer for example,

it’s a good idea to include “would you mind”

Would you mind helping me?

Notice how the verb form following

changes when you’re using “would you mind”.

The main verb is always in the -ing form.

So these modal verbs are often used to request for help.

But what about some of the other expressions that

I mentioned at the start of this video?

To give someone a hand or to lend someone a hand.

This is another really common way

to ask for help in English.

I use this expression all the time.

Can you give me a hand for a minute?

Could you lend me a hand?

It’s a casual, relaxed way to ask for help.

Usually it’s used when what you’re asking

doesn’t require a huge amount of effort

from the person that you’re asking for help.

Here are some more examples in different contexts

with different tenses.

Can you give me a hand with these shopping bags?

They’re really heavy!

My mum really needs someone

to give her a hand in the shop on Thursday.

Thanks so much for giving us a hand yesterday!

My brother gave me a hand moving furniture

into the new apartment.

It was so hot! I wish you had given me a hand.

See how the verb form changes with these expressions

when the tense changes.

Mum needs someone to give her a hand.

Thanks so much for giving us a hand.

My brother gave me a hand.

I wish you had given me a hand.

To help someone out.

Help me out, help you out, help them out.

Help anybody out!

When you’re asking someone to do something for you

or to help you solve a problem,

you can use this phrasal verb.

But you usually need to say who needs the help.

So for example,

I need to translate this sentence. Can you help me out?

I’d really like to help you out,

but I’ll be working on Saturday.

John always helps his neighbours out.

His parents helped him out

when he bought his first house.

And in this context, this means

that they gave him money.

To help out, it can be with assistance

or it can be with money.

Now, all those examples were transitive phrasal verbs.

I told you who was receiving the help.

But “help out” can also be intransitive

but that’s when we know who is being helped

by the context.

So let me show you with some examples.

Could you work in the shop next Tuesday?

I know that’s usually your day off…

Sure, I can help out!

It’s clear what I’m going to help out with.

I know you’ve got lots on at the moment.

Would you like the kids to help out tomorrow?

Now if you want, you can add ‘with’

to say what help you need.

So the structure is to help out with something

or to help somebody out with something.

Can you help me out with this question?

My brothers and I are lucky my mum and dad

usually help us out with money if we really need it.

Okay here’s an interesting expression that will

allow you to ask for help.

I wonder if you’ve heard of it.

To do someone a favour.

A favour.

What’s a favour?

Well it’s something that you can do for someone

to help them.

And it’s not specific but you can ask someone to do

you a favour.

You can ask them to do something for you

that will help you

and the way to do that is to say,

“Could you do me a favour?”

or “Can I ask you for a favour?”

Now when you’re asking for help,

these are great expressions to use.

Once you’ve asked someone for a favour, you can also

owe someone a favour.

I owe you a favour.

So if you’ve helped me in the past

and I want to help you,

to show you how much I appreciate it,

then I can use this expression “I owe you a favour”

It’s my turn to do something for you.

In fact, you can say “let me return the favour”

when you want to do something

for the person who previously helped you.

The person who helped you in the past.

You can say “I want to return the favour”

When talking about favours,

you need to remember that this is a countable noun.

So you need to include ‘a’ when you’re

talking about a single favour.

You also need to remember these collocations.

These are the words that you’ll often hear and see

used with favour.

To do someone a favour.

To ask someone a favour.

To owe someone a favour.

And to return a favour or return the favour.

For example, he really did me a favour

by introducing me to Terry.

John keeps asking me for favours, and I’ve had enough!

My sister owes you a favour!

She returned the favour last week,

she took me to a football game!

You know what? I could use some help.

This expression is quite vague,

it’s not being specific about what help you need

or who you need the help from.

And it’s quite useful in a professional context

when you might not want to ask for help

but still you would like someone to help you out.

You can make this request a little more direct

by saying “I could use your help”

instead of “some help”.

In this expression you must use ‘could’

as the modal verb.

the expression doesn’t sound right if you say

“I can use your help”

I could use your help moving this furniture.

I could use your help with dinner.

You can also use “I could use a hand” in the same way.

I could use a hand, these bags are really heavy!

Paul looks like he could use a hand.

So there you have it!

Five ways to ask for help in English naturally.

Now idiomatic expressions and phrasal verbs

like the examples in this lesson are a little tricky

but try to focus on these ones this week.

Ask for help from as many people as you can and offer

your help to others too! It will be great practice.

As an extra bonus I’ll share an interesting expression

with you about help.

Have you ever heard anyone say

“You scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours!”

It’s used when two people both do something

to help the other,

so that they’re both being helped.

They’re both benefiting.

The HiNative app is a perfect example of this.

When you help from a native English speaker,

you can return the favour by helping them to

understand an expression in your native language.

Everybody wins!

If you enjoyed this lesson, make sure you subscribe

to the mmmEnglish channel

by clicking that red button down there

and check out some of my other lessons right here!

Thanks for watching and I will see you next week

for another lesson. Bye for now!

大家好,我是 mmmEnglish 的 Emma!

你来这里是为了帮助你的英语吗?

大概。

好吧,你来对地方了!

你只需要问

,有

很多不同的方式可以用英语寻求帮助。

在本课中,

我将分享一些常见的表达方式

和搭配,以帮助您

自信地用英语寻求帮助。

我将讨论

您在寻求帮助时可以使用哪些情态动词

,我还将

与您分享一些非常常见的表达方式。

比如,帮助或

帮助某人,帮助某人

,帮某人一个忙,

甚至这个

我可以使用一些帮助。

当向以英语为母语的人寻求帮助时,所有这些表达方式都会很有用。

说到帮助别人,

你听说过 HiNative 应用吗?

通过使用它,您可以获得

以英语为母语的

人的帮助,并帮助其他正在学习您的

母语的人。

这是一个应用程序,

就像几乎任何语言的母语人士之间的语言交流一样。

您可以提出问题,

社区中的其他母语人士会帮助您回答问题。

因此,您知道有时您会遇到

在字典中找不到的英语短语。

电影中的一些随机台词或

一些奇怪的歌词。 当字典不能时,

HiNative 可以为您提供答案

因此,假设您是西班牙人,并且

您在一首英文歌曲中听到了一些您

并不真正理解的单词。

我会在沙发上闲逛,只是在我的 Snuggie 里放松一下。

就像有一个母语为英语的朋友

,你可以随时寻求帮助!

您输入您的问题,母语为英语的人

通常会在几分钟内给您回信。

您甚至可以上传录音以获取

有关您的发音的反馈。

寒冷意味着放松。

A Snuggie 是一个超级舒适的服装品牌,

有点像毯子。

So chillin' in my Snuggie 意味着

穿着我的 Snuggie 时放松。

凉爽的!

当其他学习您的母语的人

有问题时,您也可以帮助他们!

这太酷了! 它是免费下载的

,它适用于任何智能手机!

使用 HiNative 获得以英语为母语的人的帮助是

小菜一碟!

所以当你需要帮助的时候,你怎么能请求帮助呢?

好吧,让我们从基础开始。 在寻求

帮助时,有一些情态动词非常有用

可以,

“你能帮帮我吗?”

这意味着您能提供帮助吗?

可以,

“你能帮帮我吗?”

这意味着您可以提供帮助吗?

或者,“你会帮助我吗?”

这意味着你愿意提供帮助吗?

其他情态动词也是可能的,但这三个

是寻求帮助时最常见的动词。

如果您在寻求帮助时需要非常有礼貌,

例如在与同事

、老板或客户交谈时,

最好包括“您介意”

您介意帮助我吗?

注意

当你使用“would you mind”时动词形式的变化。

主要动词总是-ing形式。

所以这些情态动词经常被用来请求帮助。

但是我在视频开头提到的其他一些表达方式

呢?

帮助某人或帮助某人。

这是另一种非常常见的

用英语寻求帮助的方式。

我一直使用这个表达。

你能帮我一下吗?

你能帮我一把吗?

这是一种轻松、轻松的寻求帮助的方式。

通常,当您所要求的内容

不需要

您寻求帮助的人付出大量努力时,就会使用它。

以下是在不同语境

中使用不同时态的更多示例。

你能帮我拿这些购物袋吗?

他们真的很重!

我妈妈真的需要有人

在星期四帮助她去商店。

非常感谢昨天帮助我们!

我哥哥帮我搬家具

搬进新公寓。

太热了! 我希望你能帮我一把。 当时态变化时,

看看动词形式如何随着这些表达

而变化。

妈妈需要有人帮她一把。

非常感谢您帮助我们。

哥哥帮了我一把。

我希望你能帮我一把。

去帮助别人。

救我,救你,救他们。

帮助任何人!

当您要求某人为您做某事

或帮助您解决问题时,

您可以使用这个短语动词。

但您通常需要说明谁需要帮助。

例如,

我需要翻译这句话。 你能帮我吗?

我真的很想帮你,

但我周六还要上班。

约翰总是帮助他的邻居。 当

他买了第一套房子时,他的父母帮助了

他。

在这种情况下,这

意味着他们给了他钱。

为了提供帮助,可以是帮助

,也可以是金钱。

现在,所有这些例子都是及物短语动词。

我告诉过你谁在接受帮助。

但是“帮助”也可以是不及物的,

但那是我们知道上下文帮助了谁的时候

所以让我用一些例子来告诉你。

下周二你能在店里工作吗?

我知道这通常是你的休息日……

当然,我可以帮忙!

很清楚我要帮什么忙。

我知道你现在有很多事情要做。

你想让孩子们明天帮忙吗?

现在,如果您愿意,您可以添加“with”

来说明您需要什么帮助。

所以结构是帮助一些事情

或帮助某人做一些事情。

你能帮我解答这个问题吗?

我和我的兄弟们很幸运

,如果我们真的需要钱,我的妈妈和爸爸通常会帮助我们。

好的,这是一个有趣的表达方式,可以

让您寻求帮助。

我想知道你是否听说过。

帮某人一个忙。

一个人情。

有什么好处?

嗯,这是你可以为某人做的事情

来帮助他们。

这并不具体,但您可以请某人帮

您一个忙。

你可以要求他们为你做一些对你

有帮助的事情

,这样做的方法是说,

“你能帮我一个忙吗?”

或“我可以请你帮个忙吗?”

现在,当您寻求帮助时,

这些是很好的表达方式。

一旦你请求某人帮忙,你也可以

欠某人一个人情。

我欠你一个人情。

所以如果你过去帮助过我

,我想帮助你,

向你展示我是多么感激,

那么我可以用“我欠你一个人情”这个表达方式,

轮到我为你做点什么了。

事实上,

当你想为

以前帮助过你的人做点事时,你可以说“让我还手”。

过去帮助过你的人。

你可以说“I want to return the favours”

当谈到 favours 时,

你需要记住这是一个可数名词。

所以当你谈论一个单一的好处时,你需要包括“a”

你还需要记住这些搭配。

这些是您经常听到和看到的

常用词。

帮某人一个忙。

向某人请求帮助。

欠某人一个人情。

并回报人情或回报人情。

例如,他把我介绍给特里,真是帮了我一个

大忙。

约翰一直向我求情,我受够了!

姐姐欠你一个人情!

她上周还人情,

带我去看足球赛!

你知道吗? 我可以使用一些帮助。

这种表达方式非常模糊

,没有具体说明您需要什么帮助

或需要谁的帮助。

当您可能不想寻求帮助

但仍然希望有人帮助您时,它在专业环境中非常有用。

你可以

通过说“我可以使用你的帮助”

而不是“一些帮助”来更直接地提出这个请求。

在此表达式中,您必须使用“可以”

作为情态动词。

如果您说

“我可以请您帮忙”,这种表达方式听起来不正确。我可以请

您帮忙移动这件家具。

我可以请你帮忙吃晚饭。

你也可以用同样的方式使用“我可以用一只手”。

我可以用手,这些包真的很重!

保罗看起来可以用手。

所以你有它!

自然地用英语寻求帮助的五种方式。

现在

像本课中的例子这样的惯用表达和短语动词有点棘手,

但本周尝试专注于这些。

向尽可能多的人寻求帮助,并

为他人提供帮助! 这将是一个很好的练习。

作为额外奖励,我将与您分享一个关于帮助的有趣表达

你有没有听过有人说

“你挠我的背,我就挠你的!”

当两个人都做某事

来帮助对方时使用它,

以便他们都得到帮助。

他们都在受益。

HiNative 应用程序就是一个很好的例子。

当您从以英语为母语的人那里获得帮助时,

您可以通过帮助他们

理解您的母语的表达来回报您的帮助。

每个人都赢了!

如果您喜欢本课,请确保您

订阅 mmmEnglish 频道

,点击下方的红色按钮,

并在此处查看我的其他课程!

感谢您的收看,我们下周再见

,上一堂课。 暂时再见!