Do you ever find you don't understand people at work?
If I don't understand a task at work, I feel frustrated.
It can be a bit stressful.
It's really annoying and you have to ask other people to help you with something.
Nobody likes to keep asking how to do something, so you can end up feeling a bit stupid really.
In today's episode of Office English, we're talking about what to say when you don't understand.
Hello and welcome to Office English.
In this series, we talk about the language you need in the modern workplace.
I'm Phil.
And I'm Pippa.
Find a transcript for this podcast on our website bbclearningenglish.com.
We've just heard from some of our BBC Learning English colleagues that it can be frustrating and embarrassing when there are misunderstandings at work.
Is that something you've experienced, Pippa?
Yes,
I think it can feel quite awkward
if you realise that you and a colleague have interpreted something in a different way.
Sometimes it just is annoying because it leads to kind of wasted time, wasted effort.
It can lead to conflict.
in my experience usually you know we just said oh we've got our wires crossed there and we've misunderstood each other.
It can depend what the misunderstanding is about of course