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Requesting Hotel Services — English Shadowing Practice

Practice the exact English you use when asking for hotel services. In this lesson you shadow real lines like “Can I have extra towels, please?”, “Could you send someone to clean the room?”, and “Can I order room service?”. Every line is a polite request, which is the core skill for dealing with hotel staff. You listen to each line and speak along, copying the natural rhythm and polite tone, so the words are ready the moment you need them.

12 sentences
Can I have extra towels, please?

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What this lesson trains

Make these key phrases automatic: “Can I have extra towels, please?”, “Could you send someone to clean the room?”, “Can I order room service?”, “Can I get a wake-up call at 7 a.m.?”.

Grammar in focus: Polite request forms “Can I…?” and “Could you…?” — the softer “Could you” for asking staff to do something.

Say this travel vocabulary clearly: towels, room service, wake-up call, laundry, blanket.

Copy the question intonation on lines like “Can I get a wake-up call at 7 a.m.?” so you sound natural, not memorized.

Learning goals

  • Handle when asking for hotel services in English without hesitating.
  • Use the core phrases for requesting hotel services naturally.
  • Ask clear, polite questions and understand the replies.
  • Say key vocabulary clearly enough to be understood the first time.

About this practice

The lesson is built from a real requesting hotel services exchange of short, practical lines you would actually use when asking for hotel services.

At A2 level it is a focused speaking win you can finish and repeat quickly.

Practice tips

  1. 1Shadow out loud, staying half a beat behind the speaker.
  2. 2Drill the vocabulary (towels, room service, wake-up call) slowly, then at natural speed.
  3. 3Rehearse the lines in order, as if the real situation were happening.

Frequently asked questions

What will I be able to do after this lesson?

You'll be able to handle when asking for hotel services in English — ask for what you need politely — using natural, practiced phrases.

What level is this lesson?

A2. The phrases are short and practical, chosen for real travel rather than exams.

What's the difference between “Can I” and “Could you”?

“Can I have…” asks for something for yourself; “Could you…” politely asks staff to do something. This lesson practices both.

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