Subject: Just Checking What You Meant
3:42 pm — Maya
Hi Luca,
I saw your message: ‘Can you bring the posters tomorrow and I’ll sort the rest later?’ I read that and felt a bit unsure. I had already printed the headings, but I thought you might mean you wanted me to do all the poster pieces by myself and just bring them in ready to go. I did not want to assume the wrong thing, so I thought I should check before I start cutting everything out tonight.
3:49 pm — Luca
Hey Maya,
Thanks for checking. I think we may have a small misunderstanding. I heard your reply in my head as, ‘Luca wants me to do the whole display alone,’ and that is not what I meant.
What I meant was this:
- you bring the big poster sheets tomorrow
- I bring the printed photos and captions
- then we sort the layout together at lunch
I wrote ‘sort the rest later’ too quickly, so it was not very specific. Sorry about that.
3:55 pm — Maya
Thanks, that helps. I think the word ‘rest’ is what confused me. It sounded broad, so I could not tell which jobs were still yours and which were mine.
I heard:
- I bring all posters
- I prepare everything tonight
- you check it later
Now I understand:
- I bring the blank poster sheets
- you bring the photos and captions
- we arrange the display together tomorrow at lunch
I can do that.
4:01 pm — Luca
Perfect. Thanks for clarifying instead of guessing. Let’s confirm the plan:
- poster sheets: Maya
- photos and captions: Luca
- layout: both of us at lunch near the library wall
Glad we checked. It saved us both doing extra work, and now the plan is clear.
Check your vocabulary knowledge
- assume v.
- to decide something is true without checking
- misunderstanding n.
- a mix-up about what someone meant
- specific adj.
- clear and exact
- clarifying v.
- making the meaning easier to understand
- confirm v.
- make sure something is agreed and correct