Solving Problems at the Hotel — English Shadowing Practice
Practice the exact English you use when something is wrong in your room. In this lesson you shadow real lines like “The air conditioner is not working.”, “There is no hot water.”, and “My room is too noisy.”. It teaches you to state a problem clearly and ask for it to be fixed or to change rooms. 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.

More lessons from this course
a2Checking In at the Airport — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow real airport check-in English — “I'd like to check in for my flight,” asking for a window seat, boarding pass and gate questions. Speak along to prepare for travel.
b1Going Through Security — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow airport security English — “Do I need to take off my shoes?”, “Should I take out my laptop?”, “Is this allowed in my carry-on?” Speak along to breeze through screening.
a2At Passport Control — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow passport-control English — “What is the purpose of your visit?”, “I'm here for tourism,” “How long are you staying?” Speak along to answer immigration questions with ease.
b1Talking to Immigration Officers — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow immigration English — “I'm here on vacation,” “I plan to stay for ten days,” “Could you please speak a little slower?” Speak along to handle immigration questions calmly.
a2Claiming Your Baggage — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow at baggage claim English — “Where is the baggage claim area?”, “Which belt is for this flight?”. Speak along to find your bag and report a missing one.
b1Handling Lost Luggage — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow when your luggage is lost English — “My luggage is missing.”, “I need to report a lost bag.”. Speak along to report and recover a lost bag.
a2Getting a Taxi from the Airport — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow when taking a taxi English — “Where can I get a taxi?”, “How much is the fare to the city center?”. Speak along to agree a fare and pay with confidence.
b1Asking for Directions in the City — English Shadowing Practice
Shadow when asking for directions English — “Excuse me, how do I get to the station?”, “Is it far from here?”. Speak along to ask the way and follow the answer.
What this lesson trains
Make these key phrases automatic: “The air conditioner is not working.”, “There is no hot water.”, “My room is too noisy.”, “Could you send someone to fix it?”.
Grammar in focus: “There is / There is no…” for describing problems and “is not working” for broken things.
Say this travel vocabulary clearly: air conditioner, hot water, shower, non-smoking room, fix.
Copy the question intonation on lines like “Could you send someone to fix it?” so you sound natural, not memorized.
Learning goals
- Handle when something is wrong in your room in English without hesitating.
- Use the core phrases for solving problems at the hotel 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 solving problems at the hotel exchange of short, practical lines you would actually use when something is wrong in your room.
At B1 level it is a focused speaking win you can finish and repeat quickly.
Practice tips
- 1Shadow out loud, staying half a beat behind the speaker.
- 2Drill the vocabulary (air conditioner, hot water, shower) slowly, then at natural speed.
- 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 something is wrong in your room in English — report a problem and get it solved — using natural, practiced phrases.
What level is this lesson?
B1. The phrases are short and practical, chosen for real travel rather than exams.
How do I complain politely?
You state the problem plainly (“There is no hot water”) and ask calmly (“Could you send someone to fix it?”) — practiced until it stays polite.
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