Office English: Bad News

办公室英语:坏消息

Learning English For Work

语言学习

2024-03-07

12 分钟
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单集简介 ...

Sometimes we have to give or receive bad news at work. How do you know when your boss is giving you bad news? What’s the difference between being sacked and being made redundant? In this episode of Office English, Pippa and Phil talk about how to recognise bad news and deliver it to other people. Find a full transcript for this episode and more programmes to help you with your English at https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/office-english/240304 (Image credit: BBC/Getty Images)
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单集文稿 ...

  • Sometimes we have to give or receive bad news at work.

  • Even if you're really kind of grown up about it, it's still a difficult thing to hear.

  • So to give that information is equally difficult.

  • I'd say.

  • It'S important to remember that you're talking to a real person and this bad news is going to affect them in a personal way, and you have to take that into account rather than just following business kind of speak.

  • In this episode of Office English, were talking about the language of bad news.

  • Welcome to Office English, the podcast where we discuss business language to help you succeed at work.

  • Today, were talking about bad news.

  • Nobody likes talking about bad news, right, Phil?

  • But sometimes at work we have to.

  • Ok, youre talking about bad news.

  • What do we mean by bad news at work?

  • What things can be bad news at work?

  • So it's things that might affect your job in a bad way.

  • So it might be a company wide problem, maybe financial difficulties.

  • Decisions have to be made about what people can afford, what jobs are going to remain, and who might be losing their job.

  • Or it might be something more specific to you.

  • So your manager might need to give you bad news about a report you've written or some work you've done or something that's happened in your department that affects you.

  • And when people give bad news, they often don't like doing it.

  • And so they'll often use something which we call a business euphemism, and that means sort of a word or a phrase which sounds innocent, sounds harmless, but actually could mean something quite bad or serious.