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Hey, everyone. I'm Alex. Thanks for clicking, and welcome to this vocabulary lesson on talking about work.
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In this lesson, we will learn some phrases that we use to talk about work with our friends, family, colleagues, etc.
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So, you will see some sentences, as well as some questions that you can use to talk about your job.
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So, let's start with some basic questions that people might ask about your work, your job.
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For example, the most basic one, if you have a job: "Where do you work?"
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Right? Where do you work? Do you work at Microsoft, maybe?
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Do you work at Google? Do you work somewhere else?
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And, this is a very common question, especially if you don't have, you know, like a set schedule where you work,
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you can say: "Hey. When do you start?" Right? If you ask a person:
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"When do you start? Do you start at 8 o'clock? 9 o'clock? 10 o'clock?"
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This might be a common question, you know, if you're wondering if you can have breakfast with someone or maybe lunch with someone,
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depending on if they work in the afternoon, if they work in the morning, etc.
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And obviously, you can also ask when a person finishes their job. "When do you finish?" Okay?
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Two other ways that we can ask when a person is finished are:
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"Hey. When are you off?"
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Okay? So, if you say: "When are you off?" you know, you're asking them:
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What time do you finish? Same with this:
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"When do you get off work?,"
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"When do you get off work?,"
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"When do you finish work?" All right?
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So, again, you can say: "When do you finish?," "When are you off?," "When do you get off work?"
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Now, some sentences that we can use. You can say:
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"Oh, I work day shift.,"
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"I work afternoon shift." or "I work night shift."
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Now, a shift is basically the time... The period of time, the block of time of work that you do.
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So, if you work in a factory, usually factories, a lot of them are open 24 hours per day.
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They have some people who work in the daytime, some people work in the afternoon,
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some people work at nighttime. So you can say:
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"Oh, I'm on day shift.,"
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"I am on afternoon shift.,"
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"I am on night shift."
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Instead of saying, you know: "I work day shift, afternoon shift, night shift,"
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you can also say: "I'm on days.," "I'm on afternoons.," "I'm on nights."
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And this can change, depending on how your schedule works.
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You can say: "I'm on afternoons this week, but next week I'm on days."
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And again, this is important information, depending on who you're talking to,
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if they want to get together with you for something, it's important to know.
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-"What shift are you on next week?"
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-"Next week I'm on nights, so that means that we can get together for dinner before I start work." Okay?
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Now, "overtime." "Overtime" is time that you work longer than you are expected to legally work.
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So, for example, in most companies... I'm just going to talk about the North American context.
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Typically, one week a person is expected to work in most jobs 40 hours per week.
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If you work beyond that, you can work overtime. Right? You work overtime.
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Or if you work eight hours per day, if you work more than eight hours per day, you work overtime.
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So a person, your friends, colleague, family member can ask you:
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"Hey. Are you doing overtime tonight?"
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Or: "Are you working overtime tonight?"
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And short form for overtime: you can also say "OT."
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"Are you doing OT tonight?"
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You can say: "Yeah, I'm staying OT."
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Or: "I'm staying for two hours of OT." for example.
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Okay, next: maybe a common sentence for you, maybe not; depends on who you are.
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So, for example, here I wrote:
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"Jackie called in sick last Friday."
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So if you are sick and you call your job to tell them:
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"I'm sick. I can't come today." you are calling in sick.
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So the phrase is "call in." Okay? You might... Your friend might also tell you:
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"Hey. Monday, you know, we're going to have a big party on Sunday night,
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so Monday you're going to be very tired. Just call in. Call in."
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Or: "Call in sick." Okay?
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I'm not recommending this, but it's something people do.
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Next: "I need a vacation."
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And if you want to say you have been working really hard, one expression you can use is:
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"I've been working like a dog." Okay?
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You think of a dog like
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[pants like a dog] like this,
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if you are working very hard, you can say: "I've been working like a dog."
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Another more slang-like expression that I'll put here, you can also say (cover your ears, children):
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"I've been working my ass off."
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I'm sorry, my marker is not working very well here, but I'll do my best.
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So you can say: "I have been working my ass off."
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Your ass or your butt. You can say: "my butt off" if you want it to be a little more polite. Okay?
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Because you're working so hard that I guess your butt starts to sweat or it falls off, maybe. I don't know.
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Another common phrase, you know, if you are at a job where you work part time, maybe you're a student,
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and maybe there are people with more experience, more seniority than you,
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you could say: "I'm not getting enough hours."
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This means my employer, the person who gives me the job is not giving me enough work.
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So I'm working 10 hours a week, that's it. I need minimum 15 hours, 20 hours,
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maybe you want more hours than that to survive as a student or whatever your life situation is.
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We'll move over here. Another common phrase:
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"Hey. Can you come in early?"
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This might be your boss asking you: "Can you come in early?"
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If you come in early, you come in before your job is scheduled to start. Okay?
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And another way to say: "I worked overtime," you can say:
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"Last night, I had to stay late."
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So maybe, you know, you are an employee,
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you work at a job where you can't finish everything in your eight hours, or nine hours, or whatever you work,
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and you have to stay later, later, later - you can tell your friends:
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"I had to stay late last night."
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Or you tell them today: "Sorry, I can't come dancing," or:
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"I can't go to the movie. I have to stay late. I have to work more at my job."
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And again, talking about vacation:
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"Have you had any time off this year?"
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So, you can say: "I need some time off."
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Time off is time away from work; you're not really working. Right?
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You're taking a vacation, paid, usually. I hope.
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And finally: "She took a day off yesterday."
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We talked about taking a sick day, being sick.
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You can also take a day off because you have a personal emergency, or
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you have a schedule with a doctor, or something like that. You can take a day off.
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All right, so a lot of vocabulary here.
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If you'd like to test your understanding of the structure of these phrases, questions, all of this vocabulary,
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as always, you can check out the quiz on www.engvid.com.
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And please don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel.
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Don't work too hard. See you, guys.