听力文本:
Welcome to lesson two of ESLPod.com's "Using English at Work." I'm your host, Dr. Jeff McQuillan, from the Center for Educational Development.In the first lesson of "Using English at Work," we learned vocabulary about arriving at work, or getting to the office.
In this second lesson, we're going to talk about checking email, mail, and voicemail at work.
Let's get started by listening to the story of this part of my day at a slow speed.
The first thing I do when I get to work each morning is to check my inboxes.
I go to the mailroom to check my mail slot to see what mail has arrived overnight.
There are always a lot of intra-office and inter-office letters and memos.
Much of it is junk mail, so I spend a few minutes sorting through it.
The next thing I do is to turn on my computer to check email.
I open my email program and my new messages automatically download into my inbox.
Even though I have a pretty good spam filter, I still check through my trash folder carefully to make sure nothing important was filtered out.
We're also not supposed to get personal emails at work, but sometimes my friends send or forward me messages to this address and I have to make sure I respond using my personal email address.
When I don't have time to finish a message or when I get interrupted, I save it into my draft folder.
Finally, I check my voicemail. I call the voicemail system and enter in my PIN to bypass the outgoing message.
I have two new messages, and after listening to them, I save one of them and delete the other.
I look at the clock and it's already 9:30 AM! It's time for the morning meeting.
We begin our story by saying that the first thing I do when I get to work each morning is to check my inboxes.
An "inbox" is an electronic space or a real box that holds emails, or if it's a real box, papers, and other things that you need to read and respond to.