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  • Good morning, good day, good afternoon, good evening,

  • whatever time of day it is, I hope you're well.

  • Thank you for coming to engVid, and learning to become better at English,

  • the very best place to find on the website for this. My name is Benjamin. Today, we are

  • going to be doing a short lesson on useful vocabulary for making a presentation. So it's

  • going to be useful for college students when you have to make a presentation in class,

  • and also for those of you who are studying business English. So we are going to be looking

  • at how to begin a presentation, how to present ideas, how to... Useful words for putting

  • your ideas across. Lovely.

  • So, a good way to start, at the beginning. We could say: "To begin with", or:

  • "To start off", okay? So:

  • "I'd like to begin by thanking you all for coming today." Okay? "I'd like",

  • obviously short for: "I would like to begin", the infinitive "by"... "I'd like to begin by",

  • and then you list the reasons or what it is you want to start with. Okay.

  • Another use of "begin with" or "by":

  • "It was a great start to the year, beginning with the press conference in Japan",

  • for example. Yeah? "It was a great start to the year",

  • and then "beginning with" with "ing". Just the spelling when you are going to use "ing",

  • you need to add that extra "n". "Beginning with". So: "begin with" or "by". It kind of

  • also works with "start off". So:

  • "I'd like to start off by thanking you for coming to engVid today."

  • Okay? Or:

  • "I'd like to start off by thanking you".

  • "Start off with", "start off by", "begin with", "begin by",

  • great ways for starting a presentation.

  • The next phrase I want to come on to: "base on". Now, "base" as a verb, it has two different

  • functions. Okay? It can be the reason for a decision, or it can be to do with place.

  • Okay? So... If I'm using it in the past, I would say:

  • "This was a decision based on",

  • it's the reason for decision. So, you came to engVid today based on your desire to become

  • better at English. So: "I base", so I... My reason for the decision, I base this on my

  • understanding of the website. Okay?

  • Now, when I'm talking about place, we talk about basing yourself at. So:

  • "This company is based in London", or:

  • "This company is based in Germany",

  • or if you're going to talk about the future:

  • "We will base ourselves in the United States" or:

  • "We will be basing ourselves in Montreal or in Russia." Okay?

  • "To base yourself" and the reason for a decision.

  • Okay so far? I hope so. Going to do a quiz at the end so if you... You can try out these

  • phrases, and then I'll give you a bit of feedback on the quiz.

  • Now, if I'm doing a presentation and I want you to do something, I might say:

  • "I'd like you to come up with some ideas.",

  • "I'd like you to come up with some reasons."

  • Okay? So I'll put: "ideas".

  • Let's just work on the pronunciation, make sure you've got that right.

  • "I'd like you to come", "I'd like you to come up with",

  • "I'd like you to come up with some ideas."

  • And then you can ask them to do it with the person sitting next to them, whatever.

  • Okay?

  • Now, this is quite a difficult phrase: "deal with". Okay? It... It basically means to have

  • an answer to. So:

  • "We need to deal with foreign competitors."

  • This is a very difficult word to spell: "foreign", okay?

  • It's "eiga", "gn", sorry. So:

  • "We need to deal with foreign competitors."

  • Here are the foreign competitors, they're saying things, and we need to have an idea.

  • We need to have a good idea, we need to do something in return. We need to enter the

  • fight, almost. Okay? "To deal with". So, I am dealing with... You can ask it as a question:

  • "Are you dealing with that?" If you're the manager and you're talking to someone in your company:

  • "Are you dealing with that portfolio?"

  • or whatever it is. Right?

  • Now, "move on". This is a good way, if you're doing a speech, to move on to the next chapter.

  • Okay? So I have my beginning, come... I'm getting them to come up with ideas. I'm telling

  • them to deal with something. And now, this is just a way of going on to the next chapter,

  • so I'd say: "Moving on to our company's progress in Hong Kong." Okay? So, "moving on", now

  • let's look at. Or: "I'd like to move on to...", "I would like to", "I would like to move on to".

  • Now, I'd like to move on to our next guest speaker, so I'm just going to go next

  • door and see if he's ready for us. One sec.

  • That's very strange, the guest speaker, he wasn't there, so terribly sorry, but I have

  • to finish it myself. Sorry about that. Now, there's one other kind of word I wanted to

  • draw your attention to. We've got: "refer to". Basically means "look at". Okay? "Refer to".

  • So, all these people, they're sitting with their little booklets about my talk,

  • I say to them: "Please refer to page 21", or:

  • "Refer to page 34 if you want more information."

  • Okay? Another use of "refer": If a person in my company gives me serious problems, they're

  • really rude to me, I say to them:

  • "Okay, that's fine. I'll be referring that to your senior manager."

  • Okay? "Referring to", it means going to someone else, almost looking to someone

  • else for an answer.

  • Great, so that just puts us in time for our conclusion. To wrap up a speech, you conclude.

  • So we start with, start by, now we conclude. So, to conclude today's presentation,

  • I'd like you to think about doing the quiz on www.engvid.com.

  • Today we did... Well, how

  • to start, we did "refer to", we said to "come up with", all these really useful words that

  • I hope you're going to be remembering. You could say: "To conclude by..."

  • I will conclude today's lesson by asking you to take the quiz and to possibly

  • subscribe to my YouTube video

  • if you want more lessons. So: "conclude" we can also use as a noun. My conclusion:

  • Keep learning English, have fun with it. Get a dictionary, keep on learning your words,

  • talk to people as much as you can. We got like over 600 videos more, thousands of videos

  • on this website. Get involved with it. I really hope you enjoy learning English, and

  • thanks for watching today's lesson.

  • Okay, bye.

Good morning, good day, good afternoon, good evening,

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