Monday, 6 June 2022

EF6- 27 class- adjective clause, business writing

 Good morning, everyone.

We’ll get started at 11:00.


Today’s agenda:

Practice adjective clauses

Choose vocab. from “Dragon Boat”

Read paras about legend

Business letters – letter writing

Listening/talking fun



Tuesday

Quiz - adjective clauses

Continue Business letters – letter writing

Cover letters for job applications




adjective clauses

who that which


who – people

that- things, animals

which- special things, unique things


whom – rarely used, quite formal

object pronoun



Her friend who lives in India is a famous singer.

SV - who lives in India   ‘who’ subject pronoun


Her friend who you met last night is a famous singer.

SV - who you met last night   ‘who’ object pronoun

object pronoun – choice  ‘who’ OR ‘whom’

IMPORTANT- Most English speakers use ‘who’. We rarely use ‘whom’.

Forget about ‘whom’. You don’t need it.


Mary’s sister who lives in Vancouver has 15 cats. subject pronoun

who lives in Vancouver

Mary’s sister who I know has 15 cats. object pronoun

who I know object pronoun

CHOICE who I know OR whom I know


Prinka, who I was chatting with at the party, is very pretty.

Prinka whom I was chatting with at the party is very pretty.


To whom it may concern,

Dear Sir or Madam,

Dear Sir/Madam,

It’s better to get the name of the person.


where -adj clause

The city where she was born is very beautiful.

The city that she was born in is very beautiful.

That is the house where my friend lives.

Mangia is the restaurant where Enrico is a manager.

Mangia is the restaurant that Enrico manages.


whose – adj cl, shows possession

The little boy whose ice cream fell on the ground was crying.

Sarah’s husband whose school friend / classmate is Elon Musk is also a successful business man/person.


In a sentence with an adjective clause, you have to say two things.

Sarah’s husband who grew up with Elon Musk is also a successful business man/person.


Today, you are going to the TD bank which is on Fraser and 49th.

You are from Brazil which is in South America.


Quiz tomorrow

who 

that

which

Let’s choose 10 words of vocabulary from “Dragon Boat Festival”

1. festival

2. protest

3. China

4. decorated

5. rush out

6. corruption(n) corrupt(adj)

7. health(n) healthy(a)

8. disease(n)

9. wrap(v,n)

10. chase(v)


I will choose six of these for the quiz tomorrow.


You can check the blog any time: haleyshec.blogspot.com


Business letters – practical writing skills, not academic, not school writing

different modes of writing, different purposes, different intentions

school writing – writing a paragraph or essay, writing about a short story, poem, novel, narrative, definition, descriptive, process, opinion (persuasive)

living in Canada, everyday useful writing - practical writing for work, writing for business, writing for government issues, writing for immigration, writing for tax, writing for job applications (cover letters), writing for complaints



Education/training is the golden ticket.

Communication skills were key for me.

- writing skills- 

- speaking skills- I practiced soooo much. – singing, drama, plays, listening and watching good speakers- copying them

 


-official writing, more formal, not casual writing


Reasons to write Business-style letters:

(Even emails can benefit from using the more formal style of a business letter –sets a professional, serious, courteous, respectful, mature tone)

e.g. Student emails to teachers.-

“What!!!????”

“what day the class end”

“im gonna miss class today what u gonna do in class?”

Very unprofessional looking.

We can do better.

A more professional and more formal tone and structure is advised. I tend to err on the side of formality. 

-polite, not too casual

-sets a good tone

-respectful


REASONS TO WRITE A BUSINESS-TYPE LETTER

1. interdepartmental letters (within a company)

2. cover letter for a resume (special style)

3. application letters to colleges and universities

In the Fall and Spring, many of our Grade 12 students are frantic about getting applications in to colleges and universities. The letters that they write are very important. I remember spending about two hours cowriting a letter with an English 12 student for her application to UBC.

4. letter to a government agency, Canadian government or the government of another country (e.g. Canada Revenue Agency, Immigration Canada, Canada Pension, City Hall)

NOTE: Communicating with Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) is really difficult.

5. employer/manager/boss (e.g. promotion, transfer, raise, personal leave, quit)

6. business person

7. court (e.g. jury duty)

8. lawyer

9. writing to your child’s teacher

10. report to a supervisor

11. incident report (e.g to police or insurance, ICBC)

12. getting airline tickets refunded

13. refund from Amazon


Have you ever written a letter like that?



FORMAL, not casual like a personal letter

Formal – organized (clear structure), official-looking, appropriate tone, appropriate language, unemotional, a little bit of emotion can be effective (less is more)

Distribute “Business Correspondence” p.c.

Use A4 paper, 8 ½ X 11 unlined paper


WRITE YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS

AT THE TOP OF THE PAGE


Mei Zhou

Mei (Sarah) Zhou

Mei “Sarah” Zhou     “ABC” not legal name, the name that you prefer

Allan Haley

GIVEN NAME/FIRST NAME  FAMILY NAME/LAST NAME


Zhou, Mei “Sarah”

Haley, Allan

Zhou, Ming

FAMILY NAME, GIVEN NAME – I would not do it this way in a letter


Allan, Haley XXX

Haley, Allan


Allan Haley 

Apt#23, 666 Maple Street

Vancouver, BC

Canada

V5P 2B6


Keiko Nishizawa

123 Hizume

Nagano-shi

Japan


SKIP A LINE


June 6, 2022


SKIP A LINE


THE NAME, TITLE AND ADDRESS OF THE PERSON YOU ARE WRITING TO

Mary Williamson

Director, Shaw Communications

123 Cordova Street

Vancouver, BC

V5R 2D2


Re/RE: Client/Reference/Case/Account/Purchase # 4722859


(Re-regarding)


OPEN YOUR LETTER WITH A GREETING, SALUTATION


CHOOSING THE TITLE CAN BE TRICKY: Mr? Mrs? Ms?

Robin Smith

Hui Yu Chen 


LAST RESORT To whom it may concern,

very impersonal


Hi there, WAY TOO VERY CASUAL AND FRIENDLY


Dear Sir or Madam,

quite impersonal


Singh- man

Kaur- woman


GOOD SUGGESTIONS: Call and ask. Find them on LinkedIn.




Dear Grandma,        comma for a personal letter ,

comma- friendly, casual, not formal


Dear Sarah Chen: colon for a business letter :

more formal, not friendly, business , OR :


Dear Mr. Chen:

Dear Mrs. Smith:

Dear Ms. Smith:

Dear Miss Smith:

Dear Mme Benoit:

Dear Sir or Madam:


Dear Dr. Gan, MORE CASUAL

Dear Dr. Jung: MORE FORMAL

Make judgement call.



Use a colon for a business letter- professional, formal, not friendly or personal


- changing your name when you get married is your decision, your choice

- children’s names -hyphenated name



GREETING

To Mr. Pacquiao: sounds cold, very formal

To Sarah Chen:

To my dearest Mme Benoit: TOO MUCH, sounds like a love letter


e.g. student emails

To my dear teacher: TOO PERSONAL


Dear Maria,     A BIT MORE RELAXED

Hi John,     QUITE INFORMAL AND RELAXED, FRIENDLY

Hello Jun,        SLIGHTLY MORE FORMAL, BUT STILL FRIENDLY


Dear Sarah:   colon is formal, first name is casual

Dear Sarah,    SEEMS LIKE A BETTER CHOICE



Hi Justin,

You’re doing a good job as Prime Minister of Canada.

WAY TOO INFORMAL


To the Right Honourable Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau:


To the presiding Justice of the Court:

To Justice Smith:


**Look it up**

Honorific, title


To Her Excellency, President Janice Alloud:

To His Excellency, AAA BBB:


To Her Excellency, Governor General of Canada, Mary Simon:


Adrienne Clarkson- 


Research what title the person might have.

Check Linkedin.com


If you do not know the name of the recipient of your letter-


Health Insurance BC

PO Box 9035 Stn Prov Govt

Victoria, B.C. V8W 9E3


Dear MSP,

To whom it may concern,

To who it concerns,

To someone who can concern,

Dear Sir or Madam,  :  Choose one ,  OR :



NOT AS GOOD- impersonal, sometimes necesasary, for example when you are writing to the government


Dear Sir or Madam,

To whom it may concern, (reference letter)


ADVICE: It is always better to get the name of the person who you are writing to. Call and find out. Ask, “Who can I address me letter to?”



Hi there,  VERY CASUAL

Hi all,  VERY CASUAL

Hi everybody,  VERY CASUAL



Dear Sir:

Dear Madam,

Dear Sir Chan,

Dear Madam Smith,

Dear Teacher Jones,

Dear Teacher,

My Dear Teacher,

Dear Sir Teacher Jones,

too submissive


honorifics, titles – Mr., Mrs., Ms., Miss, Professor, teacher, Doctor, President, Principal, Dean, Prime Minister, Vice-President, Chancellor, Father, Captain, Lieutenant, Sergeant, Corporal, Officer, manager, Sheriff, Mayor, MP (Member of Parliament), MLA (Member of the Legislative Assembly), Senator, Queen, King, Prince, Princess, Emperor


Dear Professor Mahed,

Dear Teacher Jones, XXX

Teacher Haley polite translation, not English

To Mayor Kennedy Stewart:

Dear Principal Williams,


In class – Sir, Ma’am – very polite


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