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Business English Vocabulary Challenge: making excuses

Updated: Mar 24

Welcome to the Business English Vocabulary Challenge! Today, we're learning four common Business English adjectives to describe excuses.


Today's Challenge:


Choose the correct option and listen to the sentence.



Did you get it right?


LAME EXCUSE

phrase

a bad or weak excuse that no one believes


Saying your dog ate your report is a pretty lame excuse.


He said his phone died, but it sounded like a lame excuse.



VALID EXCUSE

phrase

a good and fair reason for something


Being sick is a valid excuse for missing work.


She had a valid excuse for leaving early—her child was sick.



CONVINCING EXCUSE

phrase

an excuse that sounds believable


Her excuse about the power outage was so convincing that no one questioned her.


His detailed explanation of the emergency was a convincing excuse.



SINCERE EXCUSE

phrase

a real and honest excuse


He gave a sincere excuse for forgetting my birthday and made it up to me.


She had a sincere excuse for canceling our plans—her child was running a high fever.



So, the correct answer is a) lame.


 

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