Illustration

Handling a Flight Disruption Professionally

CEFR: B2

Read/Listen first

This morning, I’ve been dealing with a serious travel disruption for a colleague’s relative who doesn’t speak much English. While he was waiting at the departure gate, the airline announced a technical problem, and boarding was paused with no clear update. He has already used up part of his layover buffer, so if the delay continues, he will arrive too late to catch his connecting flight. I called the support desk to ask whether they will rebook him automatically and what proof we should keep. They said we should save the boarding pass, take a photo of the delay notice, and request a written confirmation. Although he could try a translation app, I’d rather stay on the line until a new itinerary is issued. Unless the flight departs within the next hour, the airline is going to provide a hotel and explain the compensation process. Before my own deadline at work, I’ll send him simple phrases to use at the counter.

⚡ Learning goals

  • Can explain a flight delay clearly and ask what the airline will do next.
  • Can request written confirmation and describe what evidence to keep for a claim.
  • Can plan alternatives politely (rebooking, hotel, compensation) under a time constraint.

✨ Key language

  • Could you confirm the new itinerary in writing? “Could you confirm it in writing?”
  • We should keep the boarding pass as proof. “Keep the boarding pass.”
  • Unless it departs soon, we’ll need a hotel. “Unless it departs soon…”

⚙️ Rules & Grammar — 4 Structures

1️⃣ Present perfect continuous (have/has been + -ing)

Rule: Use it to describe an action that started in the past and is still ongoing, often with a current impact.
Examples: I’ve been dealing with a serious travel disruption all morning.; He has been waiting for updates since boarding was paused.; We’ve been trying to reach the support desk for an hour.
Common pitfall + fix: Using past simple for an ongoing situation — Say “I’ve been dealing with…” when it’s still happening..

Choose the best option: I ____ dealing with this disruption all morning.

Tip: Use have/has been + -ing for ongoing actions.

Fill with the best answer: We ____ trying to get a written confirmation since 9 a.m.

Tip: Use “have been” for an action still in progress.

2️⃣ Past continuous (was/were + -ing) with background actions

Rule: Use it for an action in progress in the past, often interrupted by another event (past simple).
Examples: While he was waiting at the gate, the airline announced a technical problem.; Boarding was paused while passengers were asking for updates.; I was calling support when the message came through.
Common pitfall + fix: Mixing tenses (using past simple for the background) — Keep the long action in past continuous: “was waiting”..

Choose the best option: While he ____ at the gate, boarding was paused.

Tip: Use was/were + -ing after “while” for background actions.

Fill with the best answer: While we ____ for an update, I saved the boarding pass.

Tip: Use past continuous with “while” to set the scene.

3️⃣ First conditional (if + present, will + base verb)

Rule: Use it to talk about a real possible result in the future.
Examples: If the delay continues, he will miss the connecting flight.; If they rebook him, he will get a new itinerary.; If we keep the proof, we will be ready to claim compensation.
Common pitfall + fix: Using “will” in the if-clause — Say “If the delay continues…” not “If the delay will continue…”..

Choose the best option: If the delay ____ , he will arrive too late.

Tip: Use present simple in the if-clause.

Fill with the best answer: If they ____ him, he will receive a new itinerary.

Tip: Use the base verb after they: “they rebook”.

4️⃣ Unless + future plan (going to / will)

Rule: Use “unless” to mean “if not”. Combine it with future forms to describe plans or likely outcomes.
Examples: Unless the flight departs soon, the airline is going to provide a hotel.; Unless we get confirmation, we won’t know the new schedule.; Unless he finds help, he will struggle at the counter.
Common pitfall + fix: Forgetting that “unless” already contains “not” — Don’t say “unless… not”; say “Unless it departs soon…”..

Choose the best option: Unless it departs soon, we ____ need a hotel.

Tip: Unless = if not; use “will” for the result.

Fill with the best answer: Unless we get it in writing, we ____ be able to claim compensation.

Tip: Use “won’t” to show the negative result.

✍️ Vocabulary

  travel disruption

Meaning: an unexpected problem that interrupts a planned journey (e.g., delays, cancellations).
Synonyms: interruption, setback, disturbance
Chunk/Idiom: deal with a disruption
Example: We handled the travel disruption calmly at the support desk.
Morphology: noun (disruption), verb (disrupt), adj. (disruptive), adv. (disruptively)
Self-practice: Write one sentence about a disruption you’ve dealt with at work.

  layover buffer

Meaning: extra time between flights that reduces the risk of missing a connection.
Synonyms: time cushion, safety margin, extra time
Chunk/Idiom: use up the buffer
Example: His layover buffer disappeared because boarding was paused.
Morphology: noun (layover), verb (lay over), adj. (extra), adv. (safely)
Self-practice: Say how much buffer you usually plan for long-haul trips.

  rebook

Meaning: to arrange a new reservation for a flight after a change or disruption.
Synonyms: reschedule, rearrange, reissue
Chunk/Idiom: rebook automatically
Example: They agreed to rebook him on the next available flight.
Morphology: verb (rebook), noun (rebooking), adj. (available), adv. (automatically)
Self-practice: Ask politely for a rebooking in one clear question.

  boarding pass

Meaning: the document or digital code you show to board a plane.
Synonyms: ticket, pass, travel document
Chunk/Idiom: keep the boarding pass
Example: Keep your boarding pass as proof of the original itinerary.
Morphology: noun (pass), verb (board), adj. (digital), adv. (securely)
Self-practice: List two reasons to keep your boarding pass during a delay.

  written confirmation

Meaning: a message or document that confirms details officially (email, SMS, letter).
Synonyms: proof in writing, official notice, confirmation email
Chunk/Idiom: confirm in writing
Example: I requested a written confirmation before leaving the counter.
Morphology: noun (confirmation), verb (confirm), adj. (written), adv. (officially)
Self-practice: Complete: “Could you confirm ___ in writing?”

  compensation

Meaning: money or support offered to make up for inconvenience (meals, hotel, refund).
Synonyms: reimbursement, payout, redress
Chunk/Idiom: claim compensation
Example: We may claim compensation if the delay is long enough.
Morphology: noun (compensation), verb (compensate), adj. (eligible), adv. (financially)
Self-practice: Say what compensation you would expect after a long delay.

☁️ Examples (+ audio)


I’ve been dealing with a travel disruption, so I need a written confirmation today.

While he was waiting at the gate, boarding was paused without a clear timeline.

If the delay continues, they will rebook him and cover a hotel during the layover.

Unless we keep the boarding pass, we won’t be able to claim compensation.

✏️ Exercises

Grammar

Choose the best option: I ____ dealing with this issue all morning.

Tip: Use present perfect continuous for actions still happening.


Choose the best option: While he ____ at the gate, boarding was paused.

Tip: Use past continuous after “while” for background actions.


Fill with the best answer:
If the delay continues, he ____ arrive too late for the connection.

Tip: First conditional: if + present, will + base verb.


Fill with the best answer:
Unless it departs within an hour, the airline ____ going to provide a hotel.

Tip: Use “is going to” for a likely plan.




Vocabulary & Comprehension

What is a “layover buffer”?

Tip: It’s the time cushion that helps you avoid missing a connection.


Which item is best to keep as proof during a delay?

Tip: Keep documents that show your original itinerary.

Fill with the best answer:
I asked for a ____ confirmation by email, not just a verbal promise.

Tip: “Written confirmation” means proof in writing (email/SMS).


Fill with the best answer:
If the airline is responsible, you may claim ____ for the disruption.

Tip: Compensation is money or support for inconvenience.

✅ Guided practice

Mini-dialogue:

A: Could you confirm whether you’ll rebook him automatically?
B: Yes—if the delay continues, we’ll issue a new itinerary and email a written confirmation.
A: Unless it departs soon, will you also provide a hotel during the layover?

Why this matters:
In business travel, delays can hit deadlines and budgets. Clear proof (boarding pass, confirmation) protects you when you claim compensation. Polite, precise questions help you get faster support at the counter.

Verb & Adjective Pack:

rebook — Could you rebook me on the next available flight?
confirm in writing — Could you confirm the details in writing?
eligible — Am I eligible for hotel accommodation?

Try & compare:

Fill with the best answer: Unless we get it ____ , we can’t prove the new itinerary.

Tip: “Unless” means “if not”; “in writing” matches “written confirmation”.

Self-correction: Fix the sentence: If the delay will continue, he will miss the connection.

Tip: Use present simple in the if-clause (continues).

Practice aloud: Listen, repeat, then type the sentence.

We should keep the boarding pass as proof.

Tip: Focus on the phrase “as proof” and the final sound in “pass”.

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