Lesson

Complaining, offering help and apologising

Social interactions

≈ 15 min 8 block(s)

Text

Complaining, offering help and apologising

This lesson covers common expressions used to complain politely, offer help, and apologise in professional situations. You'll learn phrases and the right tone to handle customer issues, colleague problems, or service mistakes.

  • How to complain or express dissatisfaction politely
  • How to offer help using modal verbs and polite phrases
  • How to apologise appropriately and propose a solution

Table

Useful Expressions: Complaints, Offers and Apologies

Expression Use Tone Example
I'm afraid there's a problem with... Start a complaint or report an issue Neutral / Polite I'm afraid there's a problem with the latest shipment.
I'm sorry for the inconvenience. Apology for trouble caused Formal / Polite We apologise for the inconvenience caused by the delay.
Would you like me to ...? Offer to help or propose action Polite / Helpful Would you like me to resend the invoice?
Let me look into that for you. Offer to investigate and follow up Professional / Helpful Let me look into that and get back to you by 5 PM.
I understand your frustration. Acknowledge the customer's feelings Empathetic I understand your frustration; I'll prioritise this.
Please accept our apologies. Formal corporate apology Formal Please accept our apologies for the oversight.

Tip

Key rule: Structure your response

When responding to complaints or offering help, follow a clear structure:

  • Acknowledge the problem or the person's feelings: "I understand your concern."
  • Apologise if appropriate: "I'm sorry for the delay." / "We apologise."
  • Offer a practical solution or help: "Would you like me to resend the file?" / "Let me arrange a replacement."

Use polite modals (can, could, would) to offer help and keep your tone professional.

Example

Examples in context

I'm sorry for the delay in delivering the report.

I understand your concern; let me look into it right away.

Would you like me to arrange a replacement for the damaged items?

We apologise for any inconvenience caused and will resolve this as a priority.

Tip

Common mistakes to avoid

Universal errors learners make when complaining, offering help, or apologising:

  • Being too informal in a business context (e.g., using slang or overly casual tone).
  • Failing to acknowledge the other person's feelings before offering a solution.
  • Offering vague solutions without concrete action or timeframe.
  • Over-apologising without proposing a remedy (repeating 'sorry' but doing nothing).
  • Using incorrect question word order when offering help (e.g., 'You would like me to?' instead of 'Would you like me to?')

Focus on politeness, clarity, and a clear follow-up action.

Quiz

Choose the best response to this customer complaint: "The shipment arrived late and several items are damaged."

Hint: Focus on empathy + action

Quiz

Complete: _____ you like me to resend the file?

Hint: Use a polite modal to start this offer

Quiz

Choose the most appropriate apology for a client whose meeting was missed due to calendar error:

Hint: Look for apology + responsibility + remedy

Key Points

Vocabulary

apologise

verb CEFR B1 //əˈpɒl.ə.dʒaɪz//

to express regret for something that has happened

We apologise for the delay and will send the documents today.

Expression

offer (help)

verb / noun CEFR B1 //ˈɒf.ər//

to propose to give help or a service to someone

Can I offer you some assistance with that task?

Vocabulary

complain

verb CEFR B1 //kəmˈpleɪn//

to express dissatisfaction or annoyance about something

The client complained about the product quality.

Vocabulary

inconvenience

noun CEFR B2 //ˌɪn.kənˈviː.ni.əns//

trouble or difficulty caused to someone

We apologise for the inconvenience and will fix the issue promptly.

Vocabulary

resolve

verb CEFR B2 //rɪˈzɒlv//

to find a solution to a problem or disagreement

Our customer service team will resolve the issue within 48 hours.

Expression

Would you like me to

expression CEFR B1 //wʊd juː laɪk miː tuː//

polite phrase used to offer to do something for someone

Would you like me to schedule the meeting for tomorrow?