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Unit 12 - Grammar & Vocabulary Modified cloze Page 1 12 Business Etiquette In this unit you will… • meet words and expressions about professional associations • read an article about dinner parties • role play a dinner party A How do you feel in business meetings with people you don’t know? B How important are the following in doing business? • knowing the language of your business associate • knowing how to dress for a meeting • knowing how to make appropriate conversation with business associates • knowing the format of a business meeting • knowing what to do at a formal business dinner C What do the following words or expressions mean? to negotiate, discourteous, a course, a hostess, conspicuous, an honoured guest, to cultivate contacts. D Put one of the words or expressions from the vocabulary box above into the gaps. When you are abroad and an _1_, should you give flowers to your _2_ when you are invited to a five- _3_ dinner. Nobody wants to be _4_, and formal dinners are a good time to _5_. You can _6_ the details later. E Look quickly at the article on the following page. In what kind of publication would you find it? Who would read it? F Look again quickly at the article. Find three pieces of advice which would not be appropriate at McDonald’s. G Wayne Shatner, who runs a catering firm, has read Mr Bibby’s article and has written the following letter to the magazine. Dear Sir, What Mr Bibby has written is total rubbish. I am a millionaire and have never gone to a dinner like that, nor would any of my business associates. If Bibby enjoys that kind of nonsense, then let him enjoy it, but it has nothing to do with running a profitmaking business. W. Shatner (Shatner Catering PLC) How much do you agree with Mr Bibby? How much do you agree with Mr Shatner? Discuss in groups. Being polite on social occasions – real-life phrases May I introduce…to you? I think we’ve met before. It’s been a pleasure meeting you. Copyright 2007 Euro Examination Centre. Unit 12 - Grammar & Vocabulary Modified cloze Page 2 Does success in business come from creating a good impression at dinner? Management consultant Ralph Bibby thinks it does There are few people who reach the top of the business world without having to face a formal dinner. Observing the correct etiquette can only enhance your status and, indirectly, your profits. A formal business dinner never begins before seven o'clock, though the time is usually eight or eight-thirty. It is very discourteous for a guest to be late. You should arrive at least five minutes before the hour set for the dinner. If you are late for some unavoidable reason, offer apologies, and take your place at the table as quickly as possible. The late guest begins with the course that is then being served. At the start of the dinner, the hostess leads the women guests into the dining room, followed by the host and the male guests. The hostess then tells her guests where to sit. She must always have the seating planned in advance, in order to avoid confusion and delay. These days guests are seated wherever the hostess thinks they will be happiest. The host and hostess sit at opposite ends of the table. Each person stands behind his or her chair until the hostess starts to take her seat. Each person moves to the left of the chair in order to sit. Step close to the table and – still standing – pull the chair toward you by taking hold of each side of the seat. Don't sit down, then move the chair to the table with two or three jerks. Neither lean back in the chair, nor sit too close to the table. Keep your feet on the floor. Your feet may be crossed if you wish, but not your knees. The speaker's table is placed in a conspicuous part of the room. The guest speaker sits in the middle seat on the side facing the room. On the speaker's right sits the honoured guest, the principal speaker of the evening. On the speaker's left sits the second most important guest. All those at the speaker's table, of course, sit on the side of the table facing the room. Guests other than the speakers may be honoured by being placed at the speaker's table. Who should be served first is a muchdebated question, but in any event the waiter moves around the table to the right, serving each guest in turn. When the waiter holds a dish so that you may serve yourself, he presents it at your left. Treat the waiter impersonally while you are being served. ‘Thank you,’ ‘No, thank you,’ or ‘If you please,’ in low tones is sufficient. And a very important point about drinking: do not look around the room while you are drinking; look into the glass. Use the napkin for the fingers or mouth whenever necessary, so that you will not dirty the glass. Do not drink while you have food in your mouth. When it is time to stand, push your chair from the table by taking hold of each side of the seat of the chair. Don't rest your hands or arms on the table, then push yourself up. Remember to rise from the chair from the left side. It is not necessary to remain longer than thirty minutes after a dinner if the invitation does not include the whole evening. You should avoid seeming in a hurry to depart, however. But remember: use the dinner, the time before it and the time after it to cultivate useful business contacts. Dinner party role -play The tables in the classroom are laid out for a formal dinner: a host, hostess, waiter, speaker, etc. are appointed; the remainder of the class are guests. Once it has been decided who everybody is, the students should work together to write role cards of what everyone has to do. What happens The guests arrive and are greeted. Everybody has ‘dinner,’ and talks politely. At the end of the party, the class should discuss how many of Mr Bibby’s rules were broken. An award should be given to the best and worst guest. Copyright 2007 Euro Examination Centre. Unit 12 - Grammar & Vocabulary Modified cloze Page 3 Exam Skills A Working in groups of three or four, try to define the following terms. Give examples of each in a sentence. adverbial particle, article, auxiliary, conjunction, demonstrative, pronoun, modal auxiliary, preposition, pronoun, relative pronoun. B Which are the ‘grammatical’ words in the following sentence? What parts of speech are they? Mr Bibby is a successful businessman who has made a lot of money. Exam Tip: In the modified cloze task only grammatical words are gapped. C Look at the short comment by Wayne Shatner below. Which part of speech goes in each gap? Fill each gap with a suitable word. ‘I will _1_ business with anyone, and matters of formality are unimportant for me. I’m _2_ the catering business and _3_ met this fellow who was selling cooked beans. He couldn’t speak _4_ write properly, but his cans of beans were good value _5_ money, so we did business. To _6_ honest, I keep business and pleasure _7_.’ Exam Tip: You need to know the grammatical structure of sentences to do this task well. D Read the short article by Wayne Shatner below and give it a title. You will need information from this text for Exercise E. ‘Working in the catering business means that I need to have many meetings, and a large number of those meetings occur over a meal. Of course you feel better talking about business when you have a full stomach. What we mostly do is leave the office around midday and go to a fast food outlet. In most cases I have a burger and a fizzy drink. There is nothing formal in it because we are always on first name terms and just talk to sort out our contractual arrangements.’ E Fill in the gap in the following sentence: In his business affairs Wayne Shatner is _1_ formal than Mr Bibby. Exam Tip: To do this exam task you need to understand the meaning of the text, so read the task quickly before you start filling in the gaps. Copyright 2007 Euro Examination Centre. Unit 12 - Grammar & Vocabulary Modified cloze E Page 4 Get into groups of two or three. Your teacher will give each group either Text A or Text B. When your teacher tells you to do so, do the following. (Your teacher will give you a text of 100-150 words, probably from the internet.) • Give the text three possible titles; none of them should be silly or irrelevant, but only one of them should be a good title. • Underline all the grammatical words. • ‘Tippex out’ as many of the grammatical words as you can, but remember to leave six words between each blanked-out word. Make a record of the blanked-out words. • Swap your text with one from a group which has the other text. Choose the best title. Try to fill in the gaps. • Hand back your test to the other group for marking. Exam Practice: Honouring Mr Reninson? A B C D What can successful business people expect to receive in their lives, apart from money? Do business people like publicity? Read the text, Honouring Mr Reninson. How does Mr Reninson feel about the event and why? What part of speech can fit into each gap? Do the task. Write a short news item on what happened to Mr Reninson. Fill each gap with ONE appropriate word. The first has been done for you as an example. ‘Well, I left my hometown some twenty years EXAMPLE … ago … to pursue a career in business management in a provincial city. _1_ several years I already had my _2_ company and the profits were pouring _3_. I married, bought a big house and car _4_ started a family. ‘A month ago I received an invitation _5_ my hometown to receive an honour, which _6_ to be presented to me in the town’s arts’ centre. _7_ I had very little time, I decided to go, particularly as a big show was to be put on for me. ‘The auditorium was packed. A full orchestra played a classical piece and then the lights went out. In complete darkness the stage curtains were pulled back and there I was, standing alone on the stage. Suddenly, _8_ single beam of light was projected onto me and the audience burst _9_ applause. I waved, but what was I to do after the applause had died down? I had no microphone, _10_ I just walked off the stage and drove home. It was all very poorly organised.’ Pigs A fat, wealthy, self-made businessman decided to move his family from the town to the country, so he bought a large farmhouse, had it renovated, and then moved in. One day, after a business lunch, he was arriving home in his new BMW when he caught sight of his three-year-old son rolling around in the mud in the yard. He pulled up in his car. ‘Ho, what a dirty little boy you are!’ His young son looked at his father, but said nothing. So his father moved a little closer. ‘You are a piglet my son.’ But still his son just stared in silence. The businessman thought his son had not understood. ‘Do you know what a piglet is, son?’ he asked. ‘Yes, Dad,’ his son replied, ‘A piglet is the son of a pig.’ Copyright 2007 Euro Examination Centre. Unit 12 - Grammar & Vocabulary Modified cloze Page 5 Unit 12: Business Etiquette (p. 1) D 1. honoured guest, 2. hostess, 3. course, 4. conspicuous / discourteous, 5. cultivate contacts, 6. negotiate (p. 1) E a magazine for wealthy/pretentious/affected/snobbish people (p. 1) F The text is full of examples. (p. 3) A adverbial particle article auxiliary verb conjunction demonstrative pronoun modal auxiliary preposition pronoun relative pronoun In form often similar to a preposition: qualifies and sometimes changes the meaning of a verb, e.g. to put up with s.th. The determiners (which come before nouns) the a and an. A word (used either alone or with another auxiliary) which qualifies the main verb, either to form a question or negative, or to form continuous, perfect or passive verb forms , e.g. have, do Joins words, phrases and clauses, e.g. and, but A pronoun which ‘points’: this, that, these, those Expresses the speaker’s judgment or opinion related to the main verb, in terms of obligation, possibility, etc. E.g. must, can, would, might Establishes the relationship of a noun phrase to other elements, esp. in terms of time and place, e.g. on, after Substitutes for a noun, e.g. he, them Substitutes for an item in a subordinate relative clause, and refers to the main clause, e.g. who, which (p. 3) B The following words are grammar words: is (an empty meaning linking verb called a copular), a (indefinite article) who (relative pronoun), has (auxiliary), a, of (preposition). (p. 3) C 1. verb – do; 2. preposition – in; 3. pronoun – I, or adverb – once; 4. conjunction – or; 5. preposition – for; 6. verb – be; 7. adverb – apart/ or adjective separate/ distinct (p. 3) D Talking business over a quick meal (p. 3) E 1. less (p. 4) C/D 1. preposition – For/After; 2. adjective – own; 3. adverbial particle – in; 4. conjunction – and 5. preposition – from/to; 6. auxiliary verb – had; 7. (subordinating) conjunction – Although/Though; 8. article – /quantifier(one; 9. preposition – into; 10. sentence conjunct /adverbial – so/therefore/and. Copyright 2007 Euro Examination Centre. a