Describing Your Job: Job (and other) Benefits
This is the first entry in the Job Benefits series. We’ll be talking about the good parts of our jobs all week! Other entries in the series include:
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Learning English often means learning to describe your job. Some of my students only want to talk about their jobs in English. Others seem to want to talk about anything but their jobs. This week, I hope you’re one of the people who likes to talk about their jobs. It’s this week’s topic.
Like almost all work vocabulary, you can use this vocabulary to describe a lot of other things, as well. So, even if you’re one of the English learners who likes any topic better than the job, it will be a good week for you.
Specifically, we’re going to learn the vocabulary to discuss some of the positive parts of your job. Some of these will be concrete things: something you actually get. Other things will be more the things you feel.
It’s going to be a week of vocabulary—no grammar this week—and the week’s going to end on a bit of a change. Friday I’m not going to talk about my job benefits, or the benefits of anything. Friday we’re going to talk about something different altogether. I used to do more ‘Everyday English’ here at Bite Sized English, when I’d talk about my life. And I want to re-start that tradition. I won’t tell you what I’m talking about on Friday, except to say this: I won’t be talking about my baby.
I’m looking forward to this week! I hope you are, too!
