1. You are a travel agent. Student 1 is asking you about flights from Vancouver to Ufa. You have this information:
UFA: THURSDAY Direct flight: Delta, 11:45 No other direct flights Evening: Russian Airlines to Moscow DEPART: Vancouver 18:15 ARRIVE: Moscow International Airport 23:30 Transfer to: Taiga Airlines to Ufa DEPART: Moscow International Airport 5:05 ARRIVE: Ufa 7:15 (local time) |
2. You are a traveler in Vancouver. Student 1 is a travel agent. You want to get to Samara on Thursday night. Ask for information.
Put the sentences below in order to make a dialogue.
Business. A window seat, please. | |
Is there a flight on Wednesday evening? | |
Fine. Would you check in one hour before departure, please? Here is your ticket, have a good flight! | |
Yes, sure. | |
Yes sir. When would you like to travel? | |
Good morning! I want to book a flight from London to Paris. | |
Thank you very much. Goodbye! | |
Yes, that’s fine! | |
And what class do you prefer – business or economy? | |
Thank you sir. Well, there is a flight leaving at half past eight next Wednesday, is it all right for you? | |
Could you wait a minute while I check availability? | |
Good morning! Can I help you? |
Study the dialogue below and answer the questions that follow it.
Nancy Lee is reserving an airline ticket from Los Angeles to Hong Kong. She has to make a lot of choices.
Travel Agent: Good morning. Can I help you?
Nancy: Yes, I’d like to reserve a seat for a flight to Hong Kong.
Agent: Hong Kong? Would that be a round-trip ticket or one-way?
Nancy: Round-trip, please.
Agent: And for what date?
Nancy: The eighteenth of this month, if possible,
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Agent: Friday, the eighteenth? What about the return date? Do you have a fixed date
in mind, or do you want an open ticket?
Nancy: I have to return on the 30th. Fixed.
Agent: Non-stop? There are some cheaper flights via Canada, Japan or Korea.
Nancy: Definitely non-smoke.
Agent: What class?
Nancy: Economy. Ican’t afford the others!
Agent: OK. What time of day do you want to depart?
Nancy: What’s available?
Agent: Well, both Cathay Pacific flights are late departures, 11:45 p.m. and 1:40 a.m.,
so you could sleep. It’s a fifteen-hour flight. United leaves in the morning at
11:30 a.m. and it’s a daytime flight.
Nancy: Mm, I have a United frequent flyer card, but I’ll take the Cathay Pacific 11:45
one.
Agent: OK. Now let me check availability. Yes, that’s fine. Do you
have a seating preference?
Nancy: Window. How much is that going to be?
Agent: Two thousand, three hundred and forty-two dollars, please.