Illustration

Confirm a Name for Pickup

CEFR: A1

Read/Listen first

I go to a cafe to pick up a drink. I say, “Hello. I have an order for Lina.” The clerk says, “I’m sorry. What is the name again?” I say, “It’s Lina. L as a lion, I as an igloo, N as a nest, A as an apple.” The clerk writes the name on a list. We check the order. The drink is ready. I say thank you and leave.

⚡ Learning goals

  • I can confirm a pickup name.
  • I can spell a short name.
  • I can check an order.

✨ Key language

  • What is the name again? “Please repeat the pickup name.”
  • It’s Lina. L–I–N–A. “I spell the name for the clerk.”
  • Is the drink ready? “We check the order status.”

⚙️ Rules & Grammar — 4 Structures

1️⃣ Be: It is / This is

Rule: Use it is/this is to show simple facts.
Examples: It is my order; This is the list; It is ready
Common pitfall + fix: Saying ‘It ready’ — Add is after it/this.

Choose the correct sentence.

Tip: Use is with it/this.

Fill with the best answer: ___ is my order.

Tip: Use This to point to something near.

2️⃣ Can for requests

Rule: Use can to ask for help politely.
Examples: Can you write the name?; Can you repeat it?; Can I check the order?
Common pitfall + fix: Using please without Can — Start with Can for A1 requests.

Which is polite?

Tip: Use Can you … please?

Fill with the best answer: ___ you repeat the name, please?

Tip: Can + you + verb.

3️⃣ This/That for reference

Rule: Use this for near things and that for far things.
Examples: This is the list; That is the door; This is my cup
Common pitfall + fix: Using this for far objects — Use that when it is not near.

Choose the best word.

Tip: Use this for something near you.

Fill with the best answer: ___ is the pickup list.

Tip: The list is near the clerk.

4️⃣ Imperatives: Write / Repeat

Rule: Use base verbs to give simple steps.
Examples: Write the name; Repeat the letters; Check the order
Common pitfall + fix: Adding ‘to’ before the verb — Start with the verb only.

Pick the imperative sentence.

Tip: Imperative uses base verb.

Fill with the best answer: ___ the order, please.

Tip: Base verb for steps.

✍️ Vocabulary

  order

Meaning: thing you ask to buy
Synonyms: purchase, request
Chunk/Idiom: I have an order.
Example: I have an order for Lina.
Morphology: noun; plural orders
Self-practice: Say your order.

  name

Meaning: word people call you
Synonyms: first name, last name
Chunk/Idiom: What is your name?
Example: The clerk writes the name.
Morphology: noun; plural names
Self-practice: Say and spell your name.

  pick-up

Meaning: take your item
Synonyms: collect, take
Chunk/Idiom: pickup name
Example: I confirm the pickup name.
Morphology: noun; plural pickups
Self-practice: Say your pickup name.

  write

Meaning: put words on paper
Synonyms: note, record
Chunk/Idiom: Write the name, please.
Example: Write the name on the list.
Morphology: verb; writes, writing, wrote
Self-practice: Write your email.

  list

Meaning: words in a line
Synonyms: sheet, note
Chunk/Idiom: This is the list.
Example: The list has many names.
Morphology: noun; plural lists
Self-practice: Make a short list.

  ready

Meaning: prepared to give
Synonyms: set, done
Chunk/Idiom: It is ready now.
Example: The drink is ready.
Morphology: adjective
Self-practice: Say: It is ready.

☁️ Examples (+ audio)


What is the name again?

It’s Lina. L–I–N–A.

Can you write the name, please?

Is the drink ready?

✏️ Exercises

Grammar

Choose the correct sentence.

Tip: Use is after This.


Pick the polite request.

Tip: Use Can you … please?

Fill with the best answer:
It ___ my pickup order.

Tip: Use is with it.


Fill with the best answer:
___ you repeat the name?

Tip: Can for a request.



Vocabulary & Comprehension

Where does the clerk write the name?

Tip: The mini-text says list.


What is ready?

Tip: We check the order.

Fill with the best answer:
It’s Lina. She ___ the name.

Tip: He/She/It → spells.


Fill with the best answer:
The clerk ___ the order status.

Tip: He/She/It → checks.

✅ Guided practice

Mini-dialogue:

A: Hello. I have an order for Lina.
B: I’m sorry. What is the name again?
A: It’s Lina. L–I–N–A.

Why this matters:
Correct names avoid mistakes. Spelling helps staff. You get the right item.

Verb & Adjective Pack:

check — Check the order status.
write — Write the name on the list.
confirm — Confirm the pickup name.

Try & compare:

Fill with the best answer: ___ you repeat the name?

Tip: Use Can for requests.

Self-correction: Fix the sentence: This the drink is ready.

Tip: Remove extra is.

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

It is ready now.

Tip: Say short, clear sentences.

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