Talking to Teachers
50 daily use English sentences for talking to teachers — greetings, asking help, homework, problems, and saying thank you. With Hindi meanings!
👩🏫 Why Talk to Teachers in English?
In Indian schools, students often hesitate to speak English with teachers. They worry about making mistakes, using the wrong words, or sounding disrespectful. But teachers love it when students try! Speaking English with your teacher shows confidence, respect, and eagerness to learn.
These 50 sentences cover everything — from saying “Good morning, Ma’am!” to “Sir, I didn’t understand this chapter.” Learn the polite way to ask questions, request permission, report problems, and thank your teachers. Remember: “May I” for permission, “Can you” for requests, and always add “please” and “thank you”!
Greetings & Respect (1-10)
Asking for Help & Permission (11-20)
About Homework & Studies (21-30)
Problems & Complaints (31-40)
Appreciation & Farewell (41-50)
❌ Common Mistakes With Teachers
🔊 Pronunciation Guide
📖 Word of the Day
💬 Full Dialogue — Priya Talks to Sharma Ma’am
Priya is in Class 5 at Delhi Public School. She goes to talk to Sharma Ma’am about her English test marks.
🎭 Conversation Practice — Role-Play These!
Role-Play 1: Asking Permission
Teacher: “Yes, but come back quickly.”
Student: “Thank you, Ma’am!”
Teacher: “You’re welcome.”
Student: (comes back) “Thank you for letting me go, Ma’am.”
Role-Play 2: Reporting a Problem
Teacher: “Oh no! Do you need to go to the medical room?”
Student: “Yes, Sir. May I go?”
Teacher: “Yes. Take a friend with you.”
Student: “Thank you, Sir. I’ll come back soon.”
Role-Play 3: Saying Thank You on Last Day
Teacher: “Oh, how sweet! Thank you all!”
Student: “I got good marks because of your teaching.”
Teacher: “You worked hard too. I’m proud of you!”
Student: “I’ll miss your class, Ma’am. I want to become a teacher like you!”
Teacher: “That made my day! Goodbye, and always keep learning!”
✏️ Practice — Fill in the Blanks
🎮 Quiz — Test Your Teacher Talk!
🧠 Parent Tips — Teacher Communication
Teach “May I” vs “Can I”
“Can I go to the washroom?” asks about ability. “May I go?” asks for permission. It’s a small word change that makes your child sound more polite and confident in school.
Fix “I Have a Doubt”
This is the #1 Indian English mistake. “Doubt” means suspicion. “Question” means you want to learn something. Practice at home: “Ma’am, I have a question” until it becomes automatic.
Role-Play Teacher Conversations
Play “school-school” at home — you be the teacher! Let your child practice: “May I come in?”, “I have a question”, “Can you explain this again?” Real practice beats memorizing any day.
Encourage Thanking Teachers
“Thank you for the class, Ma’am!” or “You explained it so well!” — these sentences build gratitude AND English skills. Teachers love appreciative students, and your child learns emotional English.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How to talk to teachers in English?
▼Use respectful words like “Ma’am” and “Sir”, say “May I” for permission, “Could you” for requests, and always add “please” and “thank you.” For example: “Ma’am, may I go to the washroom?” or “Sir, can you please explain this again?”
Why should I say “question” instead of “doubt”?
▼“Doubt” means you don’t believe something is true (suspicion). “Question” means you want to learn or understand something. In Indian English, “doubt” is used wrongly — the correct word is always “question” when asking a teacher.
What’s the difference between “May I” and “Can I”?
▼“May I” asks for permission politely — “May I go to the washroom?” “Can I” asks about ability — “Can I lift this?” In class, always use “May I” when asking permission from teachers. It’s more respectful.
How to tell a teacher you are sick?
▼Say “Sir, I’m not feeling well. My stomach hurts.” or “Ma’am, I need to go to the medical room.” Don’t say “stomach is paining” — say “stomach hurts” instead. Be calm and polite.
Can I download these sentences as PDF?
▼Yes! Click the “Download PDF” button at the top to get all 50 sentences with Hindi meanings in a printable A4 format.