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Introducing Others

Conversation Practice

These types of introductions involve three people:

A: The introducer (who knows both B and C)
B: Introducee (knows A but not C)
C: Introducee (knows A but not B)

Example,

A: Have you two met each other?
B: No, we haven’t.
A: Ben, this is Carol. Carol this is Ben.
(B and C smile and shake hands.)
B: Nice to meet you Carol.
C: Nice to meet you too, Ben.

Follow-up:
After you have been introduced to someone,
it is polite to ask a few general questions* to get acquainted.

For example,

B: Where are you from, Carol?
C: I’m from Connecticut.

B: Connecticut, which part?
C: Hartford, the capital. How about you, Ben?

B: Nebraska–a place called Bellevue. It’s near Omaha.
C: How do you know Alan (A)?
B: He is my friend from college.

Practice introducing your friends to each other.
Remember to smile (and use handshakes where appropriate).

* When meeting someone for the first time,
it is not appropriate to ask certain types of questions.
Do NOT ask:

A person’s age
Birth date
Salary
Weight
Marital status

You may ask general questions about the situation.

How do you know Alan (the person who introduced us)?
Are you a student at this university?
Is this your first time here?
What do you do for a living?
How long have you been working for (company)?

This entry was written by Leon and posted on 30 October 2007 at 03:09 and filed under Speaking. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.

One Response to “Introducing Others”

  1. asli ceylan Says:
    January 30th, 2008 at 02:53

    please talk with me . ı want to exercise with someone..ı m here ı’ll wait for your frienship..

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