Jessicamessica
Hi everyone! If I'm having an appointment with a doctor, and I need to attend my English class - I need to (looking for verb here that i can use) from class. In Ukraine we say I need to REASK from my English class. (meaning that I ask the teacher to give me the green light to be absent or be late for her English class). What is the English way of saying this. "I need to____ from class." What is the NOUN for this kind of procedure/process? Thank you so much!
2022年9月8日 10:23
回答 · 6
2
The natural, everyday way to say this is "I need to be excused from class." If the student didn't mention this to the teacher, one can imagine a conversation like this: Teacher: "You were absent yesterday. What's your excuse?" Student: "I had a doctor's appointment." Teacher: "Do you have a note from the doctor?" Student: "Yes, here it is." Teacher: "That's a valid excuse. Ok, I will excuse [S pronounced like Z] you this time. But in future, please come to me before the appointment and get permission first." So we have the noun "excuse," with the S pronounced the normal way. It can mean either the reason (the doctor's appointment) or the permission. And we also have the verb "to excuse," meaning "to give permission," with the S pronounced like Z.
2022年9月8日
2
Be excused from
2022年9月8日
1
It depends on the circumstances. If this is a compulsory English class that you must attend, I'd say, "I have a doctor's appointment (tomorrow). Is it OK if I miss (tomorrow's) class / if I'm late for (tomorrow's) class?" If the class is optional and you don't really need your teacher's permission to miss it, I'd say, "I have a doctor's appointment (tomorrow) so I'm afraid I won't be able to make (tomorrow's) class / I'll be late for (tomorrow's) class.
2022年9月8日
You could say “I need to ask for leave from my class.”
2022年9月8日
Hi you can contact me if you are interested in practising in English
2022年9月8日
显示更多
还未找到你的答案吗?
把你的问题写下来,让母语人士来帮助你!