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Win in 5 | TOEIC
Win in 5 | TOEIC
Author: Win in 5
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© Win in 5
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đïž Win in 5 | TOEIC
At work, your toughest challenge isnât the job itself â
itâs your coworker who speaks better English.
Win in 5 | TOEIC is made for busy professionals and TOEIC learners who want to get ahead.
Each 5-minute episode gives you:
â Real workplace conversations
â Must-know TOEIC words and phrases
â Practical English for meetings, presentations, and emails
Use your commute, lunch break, or those few minutes before work to sharpen your English edge.
Next time thereâs a promotion or a business trip â your name will be on the list.
đ§ Learn more:https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com
đ© Contact us: hello@mjenglishclass.com
--
Hosting provided by SoundOn
At work, your toughest challenge isnât the job itself â
itâs your coworker who speaks better English.
Win in 5 | TOEIC is made for busy professionals and TOEIC learners who want to get ahead.
Each 5-minute episode gives you:
â Real workplace conversations
â Must-know TOEIC words and phrases
â Practical English for meetings, presentations, and emails
Use your commute, lunch break, or those few minutes before work to sharpen your English edge.
Next time thereâs a promotion or a business trip â your name will be on the list.
đ§ Learn more:https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com
đ© Contact us: hello@mjenglishclass.com
--
Hosting provided by SoundOn
18Â Episodes
Reverse
We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Customer complaints are one of the most common situations in TOEIC listening and workplace English.
To respond well, you need more than vocabulary â you need the right tone, apology phrases, and problem-solving expressions.
If you can explain policies clearly and stay professional under pressure, your TOEIC performance and real-world communication will both improve.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/telephone-english/toeic-customer-complaint-english/
Dialogue
Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
Grammar Points
đ Transcript
Scenario
Ivy is a customer service representative.
One afternoon, Daniel calls to complain about wireless earphones he bought last week.
English Dialogue
Ivy: Good afternoon, Active Gear Customer Service. This is Ivy speaking.
Daniel: Hi, I bought a pair of wireless earphones last week, and they already stopped charging.
Ivy: Iâm very sorry to hear that. Could you describe the problem in a little more detail?
Daniel: The charging case wonât turn on, and the left earbud keeps disconnecting.
Ivy: I understand. Do you still have your order number or receipt?
Daniel: Yes, I have the order confirmation email.
Ivy: Great. That will help us process your request faster.
Daniel: Honestly, Iâm pretty disappointed. I expected better quality.
Ivy: I completely understand your frustration, and I apologize for the inconvenience.
Daniel: So can I get a refund?
Ivy: According to our return policy, we can offer either a full refund or a replacement within fourteen days.
Daniel: In that case, Iâd prefer a refund.
Ivy: No problem. Once we receive the item, weâll process the refund within three business days.
Daniel: Okay, that sounds fair.
Ivy: Thank you. Iâll email you the return instructions right away.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Many English learners feel more nervous about informal business conversations than formal meetings. A dinner with a client may sound relaxed, but it still requires professional communication.
This is why TOEIC business dinner English is so useful. If you know how to begin with small talk, ask follow-up questions, and stay personable, you can handle these situations with much more confidence.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/uncategorized/toeic-schedule-english/
Dialogue Section
Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
Grammar Points
đ Transcript
Dialogue
Ethan is a new employee at an international company. Tonight, he will attend his first dinner meeting with a client. Before the event, his colleague Mia gives him a few quick tips on how to start and maintain a natural conversation.
Mia: You look a little nervous about tonightâs dinner meeting.
Ethan: I am. I donât know how to start a conversation with the client.
Mia: Donât worry. Just keep it friendly and professional.
Ethan: Should I talk only about work?
Mia: Not necessarily. You can begin with some small talk.
Ethan: Like what?
Mia: Ask about the clientâs trip, food, or first impression of Taipei.
Ethan: That sounds safer than jumping into business topics.
Mia: Exactly. Then ask a simple follow-up question.
Ethan: So if he says he likes Taiwanese food, I can ask what he tried?
Mia: Perfect. That keeps the conversation going naturally.
Ethan: What if thereâs an awkward silence?
Mia: That happens. Just smile and bring up another light topic.
Ethan: Okay, I think I can handle that.
Mia: You can. Just be personable, and listen carefully.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Many TOEIC learners believe that saying many schedules is correct English.
However, in most business situations, schedule refers to the entire set of planned activities, not individual tasks.
That is why expressions like busy schedule, tight schedule, and check my schedule frequently appear in TOEIC Listening and Reading sections.
Understanding this distinction will help you sound more natural in workplace communication and improve your TOEIC performance.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-schedule-english/
Dialogue
Vocabulary Boost
Grammar Points
đ Transcript
Suggested Internal Links
English DialogueïŒOffice MeetingïŒ
Emily: Are you available for a meeting tomorrow morning?
Jason: Iâm afraid not. My schedule is already full.
Emily: Oh, I see. What about Thursday afternoon?
Jason: Thursday might work. Let me check my calendar.
Emily: We need to finalize the marketing proposal this week.
Jason: Understood. My schedule is quite tight, but Iâll try to make time.
Emily: If Thursday doesnât work, we can move it to Friday.
Jason: Friday should be fine. My schedule is lighter that day.
Emily: Great. Iâll send a meeting invitation later.
Jason: Perfect. Please include the project agenda as well.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Negative questions are one of the most confusing parts of English communication for learners. In workplace conversations and TOEIC listening sections, speakers often use them to confirm expectations or express surprise. Understanding how to respond correctly is essential because the answer depends on reality, not the negative wording. Mastering this pattern significantly improves comprehension and communication accuracy.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-negative-questions-guide/
đŹ Dialogue
đ Vocabulary Boost
đ Grammar Points
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
đ Suggested Internal Links
English Dialogue â Office Situation
Emma (Manager): Jason, didnât you submit the expense report yesterday?
Jason: Actually, I uploaded it this morning.
Emma: Oh, I must have missed the notification.
Jason: No worries. Would you like me to resend it?
Emma: Yes, please. I want to double-check the figures.
Jason: Sure. Arenât we closing the monthly accounts today?
Emma: Yes, thatâs why Iâm reviewing everything carefully.
Jason: Got it. Should I also update the travel summary?
Emma: That would help.
Jason: Iâll send both files before noon.
Emma: Perfect. Thanks for staying on top of this.
Jason: Of course!
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
In global business environments, professionals frequently need to share information, contact stakeholders, and inform clients of important updates.
These verbs often appear in formal emails, reports, and business calls. Using them correctly helps ensure clear and professional communication in real workplace situations.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-communication-verbs/
Dialogue
Vocabulary Boost
Grammar Points
đ Transcript
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
English Dialogue
Mark: Have you shared the updated proposal with the client?
Linda: Not yet. Iâll share the revised version this afternoon.
Mark: Please make sure you inform them of the pricing changes.
Linda: Sure. Should I contact the legal team first?
Mark: Yes, contact them before sending the document.
Linda: Got it. Iâll also update our internal team.
Mark: Great. Letâs keep the regional office informed as well.
Linda: Iâll send them a summary email.
Mark: Please notify the finance department too.
Linda: Will do. Iâll inform them once I receive confirmation.
Mark: Thanks. Letâs share the final timeline tomorrow.
Linda: Sounds good.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
In professional environments, employees frequently need to request information, ask about project updates, or ask colleagues to complete tasks.
Expressions such as ask for, ask about, and ask someone to are commonly tested on the TOEIC exam and are essential for effective workplace communication.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/meeting-english/toeic-circle-back-meaning/
Dialogue
Vocabulary Boost
Grammar Points
đ Transcript
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
Dialogue
Emily: Have you asked the logistics team about the updated shipping schedule?
Ryan: Not yet. I was going to ask them after the weekly briefing.
Emily: The client has asked for a revised delivery timeline this morning.
Ryan: In that case, Iâll ask Mark to check the warehouse inventory first.
Emily: Good idea. They might also ask us to submit a progress report.
Ryan: Should I ask for additional documentation from the supplier?
Emily: Yes, please. And ask them to include the customs clearance details.
Ryan: Iâll also ask about the revised invoice.
Emily: Great. Let me know if they ask for any clarification.
Ryan: Will do. Iâll ask them to respond by the end of today.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
In multinational companies, managers rarely say ânoâ directly. Instead, they use phrases such as âLetâs circle back,â âNot at this stage,â or âWeâll revisit this next week.â
You will learn how to interpret corporate subtext, understand high-frequency TOEIC meeting expressions, and improve your listening accuracy for higher score performance.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/meeting-english/toeic-circle-back-meaning/
Dialogue
What âLetâs Circle Backâ Typically Implies
Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
Grammar Points
đ Transcript
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
DialogueïŒScenario: Corporate Strategy MeetingïŒ
Michael (Manager): Thanks for the update, Sarah.
Sarah (Analyst): Based on the data, I suggest increasing the marketing budget by 20%.
Michael: Thatâs an ambitious proposal.
Sarah: Do you think we should proceed next quarter?
Michael: Letâs circle back once we have more clarity on Q3 revenue.
Sarah: So weâre not approving it yet?
Michael: Not at this stage. We need to evaluate the risk.
Sarah: Understood. Would you like a revised forecast?
Michael: That would be helpful. Please include a more conservative estimate.
Sarah: Iâll prepare an updated report and get back to you by Thursday.
Michael: Perfect. Letâs revisit this next week.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Calling in sick is a common workplace situationâand it shows up frequently on the TOEIC exam in office dialogues and email notices. Simply saying âIâm sickâ is understandable, but it often sounds incomplete in professional settings.
In this lesson, youâll learn high-frequency TOEIC phrases for sick leave, including how to explain your absence, arrange coverage, and reschedule meetingsâso you can communicate clearly at work and perform better on the TOEIC exam.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-sick-leave-english/
đŹ Dialogue (Scenario: Calling in Sick)
đ Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
đ Grammar Points
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
đ Suggested Internal Links
Dialogue (Scenario: Calling in Sick)
** Mina (Project Manager):** Morning, Leo. Are you still joining the 10 a.m. client call?
Leo (Team Member): Hi Mina. Iâm not feeling well today, so Iâd like to take sick leave.
Mina: Thanks for letting me know. Is it a full day or just this morning?
Leo: Probably a full day. I have a fever and Iâm going to see a doctor.
Mina: Got it. Do you have any urgent tasks we should cover?
Leo: Yesâcould you ask Anna to handle the client call and share the notes with me?
Mina: Sure. Iâll reassign it and update the agenda.
Leo: Thank you. Iâll also send an email to the client to reschedule the follow-up meeting.
Mina: Great. Please keep your out-of-office message on, so people know youâre unavailable.
Leo: Will do. If you need a doctorâs note, I can provide it tomorrow.
Mina: Thatâs helpful. Rest up and feel better.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Contract-related English is not just âlegal English.â It shows up in everyday workplace communicationâemails, vendor coordination, project timelines, and payment discussions. On the TOEIC exam, contract and agreement scenarios are especially common in business dialogues and formal documents.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/trade-fair-english/toeic-trade-fair-english/
đŹ Dialogue Section
đ Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
đ Grammar Points
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
đŹ Dialogue Section
Workplace Dialogue (Scenario: Online Meeting to Finalize Contract Terms)
Mina (Project Manager): Thanks for joining the call. We need to confirm the contract terms today.
Leo (Vendor Rep): Of course. Could you show me a copy of the contract you mentioned?
Mina: Sure. Before we sign, Iâd like to clarify the payment clause.
Leo: That makes sense. Which part is unclear?
Mina: The cancellation fee seems high. Is there any flexibility?
Leo: We can adjust it, but only if we extend the contract period.
Mina: Understood. How about a six-month term with a lower penalty?
Leo: That could work. Letâs put it in writing and update the agreement document.
Mina: Great. Once we finalize this, we can enter into the contract next week.
Leo: Sounds good. Iâll send a revised draft by email today.
Mina: Perfect. Please make sure the updated version includes the new clause.
Leo: Will do. Thanks for the quick coordination.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Boost your TOEIC exam score with practical trade fair English.
Learn high-frequency vocabulary, dialogues, and grammar used in real business situations. Start improving today.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/trade-fair-english/toeic-trade-fair-english/
Dialogue
Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Trade Fair Words
Grammar Points â TOEIC-Relevant Structures
đ Transcript
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
đŹÂ English Dialogue â Trade Fair Networking
Emma (Sales Manager): Hi there. Are you here for the international trade fair?
David (Visitor): Yes, I am. Iâm looking for suppliers in the AI solutions sector.
Emma: Youâre in the right place. Our company specializes in AI-powered workflow tools.
David: That sounds interesting. Are you showcasing a new product this year?
Emma: Yes, weâre launching a cloud-based platform designed for remote teams.
David: Great. Could you walk me through the key features?
Emma: Of course. This solution improves efficiency and reduces operational costs.
David: Thatâs exactly what our clients are asking for.
Emma: Feel free to take a brochure, and we can follow up after the exhibition.
David: Perfect. Letâs stay in touch.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Many learners study hard for the TOEIC and earn a solid scoreâbut still freeze during real onboarding on day one.
Thatâs because onboarding language is full of fast, practical instructions: signing forms, verifying identity, setting up accounts, and following security rules.
In this lesson, youâll train TOEIC onboarding English that appears frequently on the TOEIC examâespecially in workplace dialogues and announcementsâso you can improve your score and perform confidently at work.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/onboarding-english/toeic-onboarding-english/
đŹ Dialogue Section
đ Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
đ Grammar Points
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
Scenario: In-person onboarding at the office (HR paperwork, IT setup, and manager instructions).
HR (Nina): Good morning, Alex. Welcome to the teamâready for your first day?
Alex: Morning! Yes, a little nervous but excited.
Nina: First, please sign this form and show your ID for verification.
Alex: Sure. Here you go.
Nina: Just to confirm, youâll be working under the Marketing team, correct?
Alex: Correct.
IT (Kevin): Hi Alex, Iâm Kevin from IT. Hereâs your laptop and access badge.
Alex: Thanks! Do I need to set up anything right away?
Kevin: For your reference, I printed a quick-start guide. Please change your password before lunch.
Alex: Got it.
Manager (Sophie): Hi Alex. As discussed, youâll shadow Jamie today and learn the workflow.
Alex: Sounds good. Where should I sit?
Sophie: Desk 14 by the window. Also, please donât store confidential files on a personal USB drive.
Alex: Understood. Iâll follow the policy.
Nina: If anything is unclear, feel free to reach out anytime.
Alex: Will doâthank you, everyone.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Many job candidates focus on grammar accuracy and vocabulary size when preparing for interviews.
However, in both TOEIC exams and real-world interviews, success depends far more on how you structure your answers than on how advanced your English sounds.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/interview-english/toeic-interview-answer-strategy/
đŹ Dialogue Section
đ Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
đ Grammar Points â TOEIC-Relevant Patterns
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
Scenario:
A remote job interview for an international company. The interviewer focuses on work experience and thinking process rather than language complexity.
Full English Dialogue
Interviewer (Emma): Could you tell me about a challenge you faced at work?
Candidate (Leo): Certainly. In my previous role, we faced tight deadlines due to a sudden change in project scope.
Emma: How did you handle the situation?
Leo: I prioritized tasks, communicated clearly with the team, and adjusted the timeline where possible.
Emma: What was the outcome?
Leo: As a result, we delivered the project on time and improved team efficiency.
Emma: What would you say is your biggest strength?
Leo: Iâd say my ability to stay organized and remain calm under pressure.
Emma: How does that help in a team environment?
Leo: It allows me to support others and keep projects moving forward.
Emma: Thank you. Thatâs very clear.
Leo: Thank you for the opportunity.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Business phone calls are a common scenario on the TOEIC exam, especially in listening sections involving product introductions, customer questions, and meeting arrangements. Mastering expressions such as flooded with, go beyond, streamline, and at your fingertips helps learners understand conversations quickly and communicate more professionally at work.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-business-phone-calls-sales/
đŹ Dialogue Section
đ Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
đ Grammar Points
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
Scenario: First-time business phone call introducing an AI office platform
â¶ English Dialogue
Erik: Hello, this is Erik from BrightWorks Solutions. Do you have a minute?
Hana: I have a minute. What is this regarding?
Erik: We develop a specialized all-in-one platform for scheduling and digital storage.
Hana: To be honest, the market is flooded with similar tools.
Erik: I understand. Thatâs why weâve gone beyond basic organization features.
Hana: What makes your product different?
Erik: It helps teams streamline workflows, with everything at your fingertips.
Hana: Does it work well for remote teams?
Erik: Yes. Many companies use it for cross-border and remote collaboration.
Hana: Is it difficult to set up?
Erik: Not at all. Itâs customizable, and we provide onboarding support.
Hana: I might be interested, but Iâd like to see how it works.
Erik: Of course. Could we schedule an online or in-person demo this Wednesday afternoon?
Hana: Wednesday afternoon works for me.
Erik: Perfect. Iâll send you a calendar invitation shortly.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
Schedule changes are common in both the workplace and the TOEIC exam.
Phrases like cancel, call off, postpone, and reschedule often appear in listening dialogues and workplace emails.
In this lesson, youâll learn the differences, practice a realistic dialogue,
review key vocabulary and grammar, and test yourself with a mini TOEIC quiz.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-canceling-appointments/
đŹ Dialogue Section
đ Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
đ Grammar Points
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â Mini TOEIC Quiz
Scenario: Rescheduling a client appointment
Mina: Hi Kevin, do you have a minute?
Kevin: Sure. Whatâs up?
Mina: Iâm afraid we need to postpone tomorrowâs appointment with the client.
Kevin: Oh, what happened?
Mina: Our AI demo isnât stable yet. I donât think itâs proper to present it tomorrow.
Kevin: I see. Should we reschedule for next week?
Mina: Yes. Could you reach Ms. Lopez and ask if Tuesday works?
Kevin: No problem. Do we need to call off the meeting or just move it?
Mina: Just move it. Letâs put it off to Tuesday at 10 a.m.
Kevin: Thatâs fine with me. Iâll send a confirmation email.
--
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We understand the hurdles of finding a home in Japan. đŻđ”
Letâs turn those closed doors into your new front door. đ
đ Find your home in Tokyo: https://bit.ly/housestokyo
As the end of the fiscal year approaches, many companies rush to use remaining budgets before they expire.
This often leads to urgent equipment and software purchases, detailed price comparisons, and intense negotiations over discounts and delivery schedules.
Today, you will learn high-frequency TOEIC purchasing vocabulary, realistic negotiation expressions, and practical grammar patterns that directly reflect real workplace English used in TOEIC test questions.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-purchasing-negotiation-english/
Dialogue đŹ
Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words đ
Grammar Points đ
đ Transcript
Quick Check â Mini TOEIC Quiz â
Scenario: Year-End Software Purchasing Meeting
Emma (Procurement Manager):
Since weâre approaching the end of the fiscal year, we need to finalize our software purchases as soon as possible.
David (IT Manager):
I agree. Iâve compared three vendors, and their pricing structures are quite different.
Emma:
Which option fits our remaining budget best?
David:
Vendor B offers a volume discount, but their delivery timeline is longer than expected.
Emma:
That could be a problem. We need deployment before the end of December.
David:
Vendor A can deliver immediately, but their quotation exceeds our budget.
Emma:
Have you tried negotiating a year-end discount?
David:
Yes. Theyâre willing to lower the price if we sign a two-year contract.
Emma:
That sounds reasonable. Does the package include customer support?
David:
Yes, support is included, which adds value to the offer.
Emma:
Alright. Please request a revised quotation in writing.
David:
Iâll contact the vendor today and confirm the delivery schedule.
--
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Planning a business trip is not only a common workplace task â itâs also one of the most frequently tested scenarios in the TOEIC exam.
Whether youâre discussing destinations, checking flight options, adjusting your itinerary, or coordinating with colleagues, these phrases appear again and again in TOEIC Listening and Reading.
In this lesson, youâll get a realistic business-focused dialogue filled with ** expressions**, plus vocabulary, grammar, and a short quiz to help reinforce the key patterns.
Letâs get you ready for both the test and your next real business trip.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/travel-english/toeic-business-trip-planning/
đŹ Dialogue
đ Vocabulary Boost (TOEIC High-Frequency Words)
đ Grammar Focus (TOEIC Common Patterns)
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check (TOEIC-Quiz)
Two colleagues are planning an upcoming business trip for early January.
They must decide on destinations, compare flights, review schedules, and confirm the itinerary.
English Dialogue
Sarah: Hey Mark, have you finalized the destination for our business trip next month?
Mark: Not yet. The client wants us to visit either Chicago or Dallas. Which one do you think we should prioritize?
Sarah: Probably Chicago. Their team requested an in-person meeting. Have you checked the flight options?
Mark: Yes, I checked this morning. The fares went up again. We should probably book soon before the seats sell out.
Sarah: Agreed. Do you want to review the flight schedules together?
Mark: Sure. I also want to compare airlines â some include Wi-Fi and extra baggage, which might be useful for the presentation equipment.
Sarah: Good thinking. What about traveling from the 8th to the 11th? That seems like the smoothest itinerary.
Mark: Works for me. Do you prefer a morning departure or something later?
Sarah: Morning is fine. Iâd like to arrive early and prepare before meeting the client.
Mark: Same here. Letâs check availability. If the seats are still open, we should book today.
Sarah: Great. Iâll pull up the booking site now. Hopefully the prices havenât increased again.
Mark: Yeah, business travel in January is always busy.
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Master practical TOEIC workplace English for deadlines, reporting, and year-end tasks.
Learn essential phrases to boost your TOEIC exam score and professional communication.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/office-daily-english/toeic-final-numbers-deadline/
đŹ Dialogue Section
đ Vocabulary Boost â Key TOEIC Words
đ Grammar Points â TOEIC-Relevant
đ Transcript
â
Quick Check â TOEIC Quiz
Scenario:
A staff member in the finance department is checking progress with a colleague as year-end reporting approaches.
English Dialogue
Sophie: Hey Mark, quick questionâare the Q4 expense reports on track?
Mark: Almost. Two teams still havenât submitted their final numbers.
Sophie: Understood. We need the final numbers by Friday so we can finish the year-end summary.
Mark: Operations told me this morning theyâre still reviewing several invoices.
Sophie: That figures. The recent currency fluctuations slowed everyone down.
Mark: True. Want me to follow up again this afternoon?
Sophie: Yes, please. Even a preliminary version today would help.
Mark: Sure thing. How about HRâs data?
Sophie: Already received. Theyâre always the most organized.
Mark: Great. Once we have everything, Iâll combine the files and send you a draft.
Sophie: Perfect. Letâs aim to wrap up the summary before the weekend.
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In the TOEIC test, meeting conversations often appear in both the Listening and Speaking sections â especially self-introductions and meeting openers.
Many learners freeze during these moments and lose easy points. The truth is, mastering just a few high-frequency sentence patterns can help you score higher and sound more professional in real business settings.
Today, youâll learn one simple line that helps you stand out and win the room.
đĄ Full transcript, vocab & grammar:
https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/meeting-english/toeic-meeting-introduction/
đŹ DialogueïœTOEIC Meeting Simulation
đ Vocabulary BoostïœTOEIC High-Frequency Words
đ Grammar FocusïœCommon TOEIC Structures
đ Transcript
Scenario:
A weekly online meeting at an international company. A new employee is asked to introduce herself.
English Conversation
John (Manager):Â Good morning, everyone. Before we start, letâs welcome our new colleague.
Anna (New Staff):Â Thank you. Hello, my name is Anna Chen. I recently joined the marketing department.
John:Â Could you give us a quick self-introduction?
Anna:Â Sure. I have over five years of experience in digital marketing, especially in social media campaigns.
Lisa (Colleague):Â Thatâs impressive! Social media has become essential for brand promotion.
Anna:Â Exactly. I look forward to contributing fresh ideas to our upcoming projects.
John:Â Great. Our team is currently working on a campaign related to the Paris Olympics.
Anna:Â Oh, thatâs exciting! I actually worked on a sports-related campaign last year.
Lisa:Â Perfect timing, then. Your expertise will be valuable.
John:Â Alright, letâs move on to todayâs agenda.
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