English in Meetings

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The lines you wish you had, ready to use.

A free reference for the moments that catch you out in English meetings. Find your situation, take the line, use it today. No signup needed.

Buy yourself thinking time

When you are put on the spot and need a beat before you answer.

"Good question. Let me think about that for a second."
Fills the silence with composure instead of a scramble.
"Let me make sure I understand. You are asking about the timeline, is that right?"
Repeats the question back, which buys time and checks you heard it.
"I want to give you a useful answer, so give me a moment."
Signals care, not hesitation.

Get into the conversation

When the meeting is moving fast and the gap to speak never comes.

"Can I add something here?"
A simple, polite way in. Say it, then keep going.
"Before we move on, I want to flag one thing."
Use it just as the topic is about to close.
"Quick point on that, then I will hand it back."
Promises brevity, so people happily give you the floor.

Ask for clarification

When you missed something and do not want to nod and hope.

"Sorry, could you say that last part again?"
Direct and completely normal. Everyone asks this.
"Just to check I am following, do you mean we ship first and test after?"
Repeating it back shows you are tracking and lets them correct you.
"Can you give me a quick example of that?"
Turns something abstract into something concrete.

Disagree without sounding rude

When you see a problem but worry it will land as blunt.

"I see it a little differently, and here is why."
Clear and calm, opens the door to your reasoning.
"That makes sense. My one concern is the timeline."
Acknowledge first, then name one specific concern.
"Can I offer another angle on this?"
Frames you as a collaborator, not an opponent.

Give a clear update

When it is your turn to report and you do not want to ramble.

"Three quick things. First, second, third."
Signposting keeps you tight and easy to follow.
"Headline first: we are on track. Details if useful."
Lead with the conclusion, then offer depth.
"Where I could use help is the data access."
Makes your update actionable, not just informational.

Handle a question you cannot answer yet

When you are asked something you do not have ready.

"I do not have that number in front of me. I will follow up by end of day."
Honest and reassuring, with a clear commitment.
"Good question. Let me check and come back to you."
Buys time without bluffing an answer.
"My best estimate is two weeks, and I will confirm."
Gives them something while staying accurate.

Close your point with confidence

When you want to land your point instead of trailing off.

"So in short, I recommend we start with the smaller rollout."
A clear signal that you are landing the plane.
"That is my main point. Happy to go deeper if helpful."
Ends cleanly and opens the door, without rambling.
"What I would suggest as a next step is a quick test this week."
Turns discussion into action.

Small talk before the call starts

When the first minute feels awkward and you want an easy opener.

"How is your week going so far?"
Simple, warm, and always works.
"Before we dive in, how are things on your side?"
Natural bridge from small talk into the agenda.
"Good to see you. Did you get a break over the weekend?"
Friendly and human, easy to answer.

Join and leave a call cleanly

When you arrive, and when you need to step out without it feeling abrupt.

"Hi everyone, good to be here."
A warm, simple way to mark that you have joined.
"I have to drop at the top of the hour, so I will be brief."
Sets expectations early so leaving does not look rude.
"I think we have what we need. Thanks everyone."
A clean way to help wrap the meeting up.

Present or share your screen

When all eyes are on you and you want to stay in control.

"Let me share my screen. Can everyone see this okay?"
A quick check that settles you and the room.
"I will walk through three things, then take questions."
A roadmap keeps you calm and the audience patient.
"Stop me at any point if something is not clear."
Invites engagement and takes the pressure off being perfect.

Follow up after the meeting

When the call ends and you want to look organised and reliable.

"Thanks for the call. Here is a quick summary and the next steps."
A short recap makes you the person who keeps things moving.
"To confirm what we agreed, I will own the design and you will own the data."
Writing down who owns what prevents quiet confusion later.
"I will send the notes by tomorrow. Let me know if I missed anything."
A clear commitment plus an easy way for others to correct it.

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