Lesson

Requests

Make polite requests

≈ 15 min 8 block(s)

Text

What are Requests?

Requests are phrases we use to ask someone to do something. In English we can make requests more or less polite depending on the words and structures we choose. In professional situations, choosing the right level of politeness helps maintain good relationships and clear communication.

  • Requests ask someone to perform an action or provide information.
  • Formality levels: direct (imperative), neutral (can/could), and very polite (would you mind, would you be able to).
  • Use softening language (please, could, would) to be polite in business contexts.

Table

Common Request Forms

Expression type Form Example
Direct (informal) Imperative Send me the invoice.
Neutral / Informal Can / Could + subject + verb Can you send the invoice?
Polite Could you / Would you + verb Could you send the invoice by Friday?
Very polite / Indirect Would you mind + -ing / Do you mind if + subject + verb Would you mind sending the invoice a day earlier?
Requests with please Please + verb / Verb + please Please review the document. / Review the document, please.
Offers to help / Softening Would you like me to + verb / I can + verb Would you like me to prepare the summary?

Tip

Key rule for making polite requests

Match your language to the situation: choose a more polite structure in formal or professional contexts. Soften direct commands with modal verbs and please.

  • Use 'could' or 'would' to be polite: Could you send the file?
  • Use 'Would you mind + -ing' for very polite requests: Would you mind checking this?
  • Add 'please' to soften imperatives: Please sign the form.

Politeness affects tone and clarity in business English.

Example

Examples in context

Could you send me the quarterly report by Friday, please?

Would you mind reviewing this presentation before the meeting?

Please print five copies of the agenda for tomorrow's meeting.

Do you think you could reschedule our meeting to next week?

Tip

Common mistakes with requests

Avoid these universal errors when making requests in English.

  • Being too direct in formal situations (e.g., 'Send the file.' instead of 'Could you send the file?').
  • Mixing registers: using informal slang in professional emails.
  • Incorrect question word order (e.g., 'You could send the file?' instead of 'Could you send the file?').
  • Overusing multiple modals or softeners that confuse the message (e.g., 'Would you maybe be able to...').
  • Forgetting to use 'please' or a softener when the context requires politeness.

Pick one clear level of politeness and keep the sentence structure correct.

Quiz

Choose the most polite request for a colleague in a formal email:

Hint: Look for a modal verb + 'please' for polite requests.

Quiz

Complete: _____ me the final figures by Monday, please.

Hint: Use a polite modal verb + an action verb.

Quiz

Which sentence politely refuses a request?

Hint: Look for an apologetic or softening phrase before the refusal.

Key Points

Expression

Could you

expression CEFR B1 //kəd juː//

A polite modal phrase used to request an action.

Could you review this contract before noon?

Expression

Would you mind

expression CEFR B2 //wʊd juː maɪnd//

A very polite way to ask someone to do something (often followed by a gerund).

Would you mind forwarding this email to the team?

Vocabulary

Please

adverb CEFR A1 //pliːz//

A word used to make requests more polite.

Please attach the file to your reply.

GrammarPoint

Imperative (verb)

grammar_point CEFR B1 //ɪmˈpɛrətɪv//

The verb form used to give orders, commands, or direct requests.

Sign the document, please.

Expression

Would you be able to

expression CEFR B2 //wʊd juː biː ˈeɪbəl tuː//

A polite phrase to ask if someone has the ability or availability to do something.

Would you be able to join the conference call at 3 PM?

GrammarPoint

Softener

noun CEFR B2 //ˈsɒfənər//

A word or phrase that reduces the force of a request (e.g., please, maybe, could).

Maybe you could send the updated file later?