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making simple requests

English A1-C2A1 Speaking & Writing~5 min read

Overview

# Making Simple Requests (A1 Speaking & Writing) This lesson teaches learners to form and respond to basic requests using polite language structures such as "Can you...?", "Could I...?" and "Please...". Students develop essential functional language skills for everyday interactions, including asking for help, borrowing items, and requesting information or assistance in familiar contexts. These competencies are fundamental for A1 Cambridge assessments, where candidates must demonstrate ability to communicate immediate needs and understand simple spoken or written requests in practical situations.

Core Concepts & Theory

Making simple requests is a fundamental communication skill assessed in Cambridge A1 (CEFR Level A1) examinations. A request is a polite expression asking someone to do something or give something to you. At A1 level, you must demonstrate basic courtesy using modal verbs and polite phrases.

Key Modal Verbs for Requests:

  • Can = informal, friendly requests ("Can you help me?")
  • Could = more polite than 'can' ("Could you pass the salt?")
  • May = very formal ("May I use your phone?")

Essential Request Structures:

  1. Direct requests: Modal + subject + verb ("Can you open the window?")
  2. Indirect requests: "Would you mind + -ing...?" ("Would you mind opening the window?")
  3. Polite additions: "Please" (beginning or end), "Thank you"

Cambridge Command Words at A1:

  • Ask for = make a request
  • Request = ask politely for something
  • Respond = answer appropriately

Key Terminology:

  • Intonation = rising tone makes requests sound polite
  • Register = level of formality (informal/neutral/formal)
  • Courtesy markers = words showing politeness (please, excuse me, sorry)

Cambridge Assessment Note: A1 candidates must demonstrate "basic courtesy" and "simple requests for immediate needs" using memorized phrases and simple structures. Your requests must be comprehensible to a sympathetic listener, even with errors.

Detailed Explanation with Real-World Examples

Think of making requests like opening doors – you can push forcefully (rude commands), knock gently (polite requests), or tap respectfully with both hands (very polite requests). The "gentler" your approach, the more willingly people help.

Real-World Scenario 1: School Cafeteria Situation: You want extra napkins.

  • ❌ Rude: "Give me napkins!"
  • ✓ A1 Level: "Can I have some napkins, please?"
  • ✓ More polite: "Could I have some napkins, please?"

Real-World Scenario 2: Lost in a Shopping Centre Situation: You need directions to the exit.

  • ✓ Basic: "Excuse me, where is the exit?"
  • ✓ Better: "Excuse me, can you tell me where the exit is, please?"

Real-World Scenario 3: Classroom Situation: You didn't hear the teacher's instruction.

  • ✓ Direct: "Can you repeat that, please?"
  • ✓ Polite: "Sorry, could you repeat that, please?"

Cultural Connection: In English-speaking countries, indirectness = politeness. Instead of commanding ("Tell me the time!"), native speakers soften requests using questions ("Could you tell me the time?"). This seems inefficient, but creates social harmony.

The Politeness Ladder Analogy: Imperatives (Give me!) → Can you...? → Could you...? → Would you mind...? Each step up shows more respect, like climbing toward greater social grace. At A1, mastering the first three steps ensures success.

Worked Examples & Step-by-Step Solutions

**Example 1: Speaking Task – Role Play (6 marks)** *Scenario: You are in a café. Ask the waiter for the menu.* **Student Response Analysis:** ❌ **Weak Answer (2/6 marks):** "Menu?" *Examiner Notes: Too brief, no politeness markers, unclear request structure.* ✓ **Good Answer (4/6 marks):** "Can ...

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Key Concepts

  • Use 'Can I have...?' to request things
  • Use 'Can you...?' to ask someone to do something
  • Always add 'please' to be polite
  • Start with 'Excuse me' to get attention

Exam Tips

  • In speaking exams, always use 'please' and 'thank you' to show politeness
  • Practice both 'Can I...?' and 'Can you...?' - examiners listen for correct usage
  • +1 more tips (sign up)

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