Unit 1: Nice to meet you!
Asking questions
Select a unit
- 1 Nice to meet you!
- 2 What to wear
- 3 Like this, like that
- 4 The daily grind
- 5 Christmas every day
- 6 Great achievers
- 7 The Titanic
- 8 Travel
- 9 The big wedding
- 10 Sunny's job hunt
- 11 The bucket list
- 12 Moving and migration
- 13 Welcome to BBC Broadcasting House
- 14 New Year, New Project
- 15 From Handel to Hendrix
- 16 What's the weather like?
- 17 The Digital Revolution
- 18 A detective story
- 19 A place to live
- 20 The Cult of Celebrity
- 21 Welcome to your new job
- 22 Beyond the planets
- 23 Great expectations!
- 24 Eco-tourism
- 25 Moving house
- 26 It must be love
- 27 Job hunting success... and failure
- 28 Speeding into the future
- 29 Lost arts
- 30 Tales of survival
Session 4
Formal and informal writing
Is language becoming more informal because of email and the internet? Read our article to find out if 'Dear…' is dying.
ድምር ነጥቢ ናይዚ ክፍለ-ስራሓት 4
0 / 14
- 0 / 6Activity 1
- 0 / 5Activity 2
- 0 / 3Activity 3
- 0 / 0Activity 4
Activity 2
Dear Sir or Hey, folks? - part 2
Comprehension practice
How well did you understand the article? Read it one more time - and then take the comprehension challenge underneath. Good luck!
Read the article and try the activity
Article: Should e-mails open with Dear, Hi or Hey?
It's time people stopped using the word 'Dear…' to start work e-mails. That's according to Giselle Barry, a woman who works in the United States Congress. She surprised lots of people by starting an email to a group of journalists with the words 'Hey, folks.'
Ms Barry thinks 'Dear' is too intimate and makes it sound like you have a personal relationship with the person you are writing to.
It seems she's not alone. E-mail and the internet have changed the rules about how to write. In the past, there was no choice, but now you can see e-mails from people starting with 'hello', 'hi' and even 'hey'.
The American newspaper, the Wall Street Journal, wrote 'Across the internet, the use of 'dear' is going…'
But not everyone is as relaxed about this as Ms Barry. Etiquette expert Jean Broke-Smith says, 'I'm fed up with people writing 'Hi Jean' when they've never met me.'
'If you're sending a business e-mail you should begin 'Dear...' - like a letter. You are presenting yourself. Politeness and etiquette are essential.
How about you? Do you think that the internet has made the language you use less formal? Is that a good or a bad thing? How important is it to be polite?
Note: this article is based on an original story written by James Morgan from BBC News.
The comprehension challenge
5 Questions
In this game, you will see five statements about the article. Are the statements true - or are they false? You decide... Good luck!
ሓገዝ
Activity
In this game, you will see five statements about the article. Are the statements true - or are they false? You decide... Good luck!
ኣመት
Read paragraph 6 of the article.Question 1 of 5
ሓገዝ
Activity
In this game, you will see five statements about the article. Are the statements true - or are they false? You decide... Good luck!
ኣመት
Read the second paragraph.Question 2 of 5
ሓገዝ
Activity
In this game, you will see five statements about the article. Are the statements true - or are they false? You decide... Good luck!
ኣመት
Read the third paragraph.Question 3 of 5
ሓገዝ
Activity
In this game, you will see five statements about the article. Are the statements true - or are they false? You decide... Good luck!
ኣመት
Read the fifth paragraph.Question 4 of 5
ሓገዝ
Activity
In this game, you will see five statements about the article. Are the statements true - or are they false? You decide... Good luck!
ኣመት
Read the sixth paragraph.Question 5 of 5
Excellent! Great job! ሕማቕ ዕድል! ዘመዝገብኩምዎ ነጥቢ ...:
Next
Yo! Folks! Did you enjoy those two activities? If you send us an e-mail please remember to use 'Dear' – we are the BBC after all.
Facts about the course
Now it's time to find out about another new weekly feature. It's called News Report - Alice will explain more...
Session Vocabulary
folks
an informal word for a group of peopleintimate
describes a close personal relationshiphey folks
an informal way of saying hello to friendsetiquette
describes the rules of correct behaviour in social situationsfed up
bored or annoyed