<<Unit 2: Work-life balance>>

<Starting Point>


Something to think about it

work-life balance versus life-work balance

work versus free time

plug into work versus unplug from work

success versus satisfaction

company needs versus personal needs

demands of work versus demands of family

performance versus health

 

Conversational Questions

  • What is meant by 'work-life' balance?
  • Why is it important?
  • What are the benefits for the company? (3–5)
  • What are the benefits for the worker? (3–5)
  • What factors are affecting the balance of work and life at work in a negative way? (4–6)
  • What are important components of a proper work-life balance? (4–6)
  • What work-related suggestions do you have to encourage a better work-life balance?

Extra questions:

  • What do you personally do to maintain a good work-life balance?
  • Are you able to find that free time?
  • How do you relax?
  • How do you stay healthy?
  • Can you unplug easily from work?
Download
AK Conversational Questions Work_Life_Ba
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 153.4 KB
Download
The Six Components of Work.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 64.4 KB
Download
Test Do you have a good life work balanc
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 141.9 KB
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Quiz Work life balance.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 166.9 KB

<Working with Words>


Compound Nouns

A compound noun is a noun that is made up of two or more nouns. The first noun describes the second noun in some way.

 

A compound noun can be:

·                one word:                      password, website

·                two words:                    business school, labour union, market sector

·                a hyphenated word:     fund-raiser

 

Compound nouns function as a single unit and that the stress is almost always on the first word of the compound noun.

For example:

·                WEBsite

·                SAFEty issue

·                CHILD labor

·                MARketplace

 

·                TAX advantage

Rules

  • Write compounds as two words when the compounds appear with the words in their customary order and when the meaning is clear: real estate, sick leave, civil rights
  • Write compounds as single words (no spaces between joined words) when the first word of the compound receives the major stress in pronunciation: airplane, cupboard, doorstop, footnote
  • Hyphenate compounds that modify or describe other words: down-to-cost model, two- or three-cycle process, 4-year plan

 

Download
Business Compound Words.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 120.5 KB

<Language at Work>


to + infinitve or -ing form

Download
Theory Gerund or Infinitive.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 339.6 KB

Theory

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/de/grammatik/britisch-grammatik/verb-patterns/verb-patterns-verb-infinitive-or-verb-ing

 http://www.cafe-lingua.de/englische-grammatik/verben-mit-to-infinitiv.php

http://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/wordlist?04

 

Lists

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerund_list.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/infinitive_list.htm

 

Agenda Web

https://agendaweb.org/verbs/infinitive_gerund-exercises.html

 

 Theory

 

 

Exercises

http://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/exercises/infinitive1/index.php

http://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/exercises?02

https://www.ego4u.com/en/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/exercises?03

https://www.ego4u.com/en/cram-up/tests/infinitive-gerund-1

http://www.learnenglishfeelgood.com/modals-infinitive-practice1.html

http://www.learnenglishfeelgood.com/modals-infinitive-practice2.html

 

  

Mixed

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_1.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_2.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_4.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_5.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_6.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_7.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_8.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_9.htm

https://www.englishpage.com/gerunds/gerunds_infinitives_10.htm

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/exercises?04

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/exercises?06

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/exercises?09

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/exercises?10

https://www.englisch-hilfen.de/uebungen/strukturen/gerund_infinitiv.htm

https://www.englisch-hilfen.de/uebungen/strukturen/gerund_infinitiv2.htm

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/grammar/infinitive-gerund/exercises?30

 

Test

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/tests/infinitive-gerund-1

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/tests/infinitive-gerund-2

https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/tests/infinitive-gerund-3

 https://www.ego4u.de/de/cram-up/tests/infinitive-gerund-4

<Practically Speaking>


42 Ways to Say Yes in English

Informal

  1. Yes
  2. Ya
  3. Yep
  4. Yup
  5. YAAAAAS
  6. Totally
  7. Totes
  8. Sure
  9. OK
  10. K
  11. Okay
  12. Okie dokie
  13. Alright
  14. Alrighty
  15. Sounds good
  16. For sure
  17. Sure thing
  18. You bet

Formal

  1. Certainly
  2. Definitely
  3. Of course
  4. Gladly
  5. Indubitably
  6. Absolutely
  7. Indeed
  8. Undoubtedly
  9. Yeah, yeah, yeah
  10. Fine
  11. Affirmative (Because it is so excessively formal, you’ll most likely find this used when someone is trying to sound funny or robotic.)
  12. Very well
  13. Obviously
  14. No (This last one really requires emphasis, and even perhaps an eye roll, to seal the deal.)

Archaic

  1. Aye
  2. Forsooth
  3. Yea
  4. Verily
  5. Surely
  6. Mhmm
  7. Uh-huh
  8. [Nodding]
  9. Thumbs up] The thumbs up emoji.
  10. [Okay sign] The okay emoji.

https://www.inklyo.com/ways-to-say-yes-in-english/

<Business Communication>


Asking for contact details

Asking for contact details

  • Could you please give me your contact details?
  • Could I please get your contact information?
  • May I please get your details?
  • Do you mind if I get the details?
  • Can I have your number?
  • What's your web address?
  • Do you have an email?

Checking numbers and spelling

  • How do you spell that?
  • Do you spell that with N or M?
  • Sorry, could you please repeat?
  • Could you say that again?
Download
English Business Cards.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 474.7 KB

Possible Contact Details

  • title
  • first and second name
  • position
  • company
  • institute/department
  • address (street, zip code, city)
  • state
  • country
  • direct phone number (country code, area code)
  • mobile / cell phone
  • extension
  • fax
  • email
  • website

 

English ABC

Websites

 

http://german.stackexchange.com/questions/ask

 

H T T P COLON DOUBLE SLASH german DOT stackexchange DOT com SLASH questions SLASH ask

Learning Apps

Special Character Bingo: https://learningapps.org/display?v=p6xcus21523

Download
Spelling Emails and Websites.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 92.6 KB

<Talking Point>


<Quizlet>


https://quizlet.com/307180389/business-result-unit-2-flash-cards/

Download
Business Result Unit 2.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Dokument 63.2 KB

<Online Practice>