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B2 First Informal Email Writing: How to Write an Email to a Friend

  • Immagine del redattore: Dave
    Dave
  • 4 giorni fa
  • Tempo di lettura: 5 min

In Cambridge B2 First Writing Part 2, you may choose to write an email or letter.


You will be given a situation and you need to write a clear response in an appropriate style. The email or letter may be informal, semi-formal or formal, depending on who you are writing to.

You should write 140-190 words.


What Do You Have To Do?


In this task, you need to:

  • read the situation carefully

  • understand who you are writing to

  • decide the correct style

  • answer all the points in the task

  • organise your ideas clearly

  • use suitable opening and closing phrases

  • write between 140 and 190 words


Unlike B1 Preliminary, you do not usually have four notes around an email. At B2 level, the task gives you a situation and tells you what information to include.


Focus On The Instructions


Before you start writing, ask yourself:

Question

Why It Matters

Who am I writing to?

This tells you the style: informal, semi-formal or formal.

Why am I writing?

This gives your main purpose.

What points must I include?

These are essential for content marks.

What tone should I use?

Friendly, polite, apologetic, persuasive, grateful, etc.

How many words do I need?

140-190 words.



Example Exam Task


You recently received this email from your English-speaking friend Max.

From: MaxSubject: Visit to your town
Hi,
I’m coming to your town next month and I’d love to spend a day with you. What do you think we should do? I know you’re really into sport, so maybe we could do something active. Also, could you suggest somewhere good to eat?
Let me know what you think!
Max


Write your email to Max.


In your email, you should:

  • suggest what you could do together

  • explain why Max would enjoy it

  • recommend somewhere to eat

  • say how you feel about his visit


Write 140-190 words.



Focus On The Task


Before writing, answer these questions:

  1. Who are you writing to?

  2. Is the style formal, semi-formal or informal?

  3. Why are you writing?

  4. What activity could you suggest?

  5. Why would Max enjoy it?

  6. Where could you eat?

  7. How will you end the email?


A Simple Email Structure


A B2 First email usually works well with 4 paragraphs.


Paragraph 1 - Opening

Start naturally and respond to the situation.


Useful phrases:

  • Hi Max,

  • Great to hear from you!

  • I’m really glad you’re coming to visit.

  • Thanks for your email.

  • It’ll be great to see you again.


Paragraph 2 - First Main Point

Answer the first part of the task.


For example:

  • I think we should...

  • Why don’t we...?

  • We could...

  • I’d suggest...

  • It would be a good idea to...


Paragraph 3 - Second Main Point

Add more detail, explanation or another suggestion.


For example:

  • I’m sure you’d enjoy it because...

  • The best thing about it is...

  • Another option would be...

  • As you’re into sport, I think you’d really like...


Paragraph 4 - Closing

Finish naturally and warmly.


Useful phrases:

  • I can’t wait to see you.

  • Let me know what you think.

  • Write back soon.

  • See you soon!

  • All the best,

  • Best wishes,



Informal Or Formal?

The style depends on the person you are writing to.

If You Write To...

Style

a friend

informal

a classmate

informal or semi-formal

a teacher

semi-formal

a course organiser

formal or semi-formal

a company or manager

formal

For Max, the style should be informal, because he is your friend.


Useful Language For Informal Emails


Opening

  • Hi Max,

  • Great to hear from you!

  • Thanks for your email.

  • I’m really happy you’re coming to visit.


Making Suggestions

  • Why don’t we go...?

  • We could try...

  • How about going...?

  • I think you’d really enjoy...

  • I’d suggest visiting...


Giving Reasons

  • I’m sure you’d like it because...

  • The reason I’d recommend it is that...

  • It would be perfect for you because...

  • As you love sport, I think...


Recommending Places

  • There’s a great place near...

  • I know a small restaurant where...

  • The food is excellent and it isn’t too expensive.

  • It’s popular, so we should probably book a table.


Closing

  • Let me know what you think.

  • I can’t wait to see you.

  • Write back soon.

  • See you soon,

  • Best wishes,


Model Answer


Hi Max,

Great to hear from you! I’m really happy you’re coming to visit next month, and it would be brilliant to spend the day together.


As you enjoy sport, I think we should go to the new tennis club near the park. The courts are excellent, and we can rent rackets there, so you don’t need to bring anything with you. I’m sure you’d enjoy it because you told me you’ve been playing a lot recently.


After that, we could have lunch at Mario’s, a small restaurant in the town centre. It serves great pasta and pizza, and the prices are quite reasonable. It’s also only ten minutes from the tennis club by bus.


I can’t wait to see you. Let me know if this sounds good!

Best wishes,

David


Why Is This A Good Email?


This answer works well because it:

  • uses an informal style

  • answers all parts of the task

  • gives clear suggestions

  • explains why Max would enjoy the activity

  • recommends somewhere to eat

  • uses natural opening and closing phrases

  • stays within the word limit


Common Mistakes


Avoid these problems:

  • writing too formally to a friend

  • forgetting one of the task points

  • writing too little

  • using no paragraphs

  • giving suggestions without reasons

  • ending the email too suddenly

  • using memorised phrases that do not fit the situation


Practice 1 - Understand The Task

Read the exam task again and answer the questions.



Practice 2 - Useful Email Phrases

Match the phrases to their function.



Practice 3 - Plan Your Email

Use the task below.


Write your email to Anna.

In your email, you should:

  • suggest what kind of course she should choose

  • explain how she can practise outside lessons

  • give your opinion about online lessons

  • encourage her


Write 140-190 words.



Planning table:

Paragraph

Notes

Paragraph 1: Opening


Paragraph 2: Course suggestion


Paragraph 3: Practice and online lessons


Paragraph 4: Encouragement and closing



Practice 4 - Write Your Email

Now write your own email to Anna.

Remember:

  • write 140-190 words

  • use the correct style

  • answer all parts of the task

  • organise your email into clear paragraphs

  • use natural opening and closing phrases

  • check spelling and punctuation



Need Help Preparing For B2 First?


These free activities are a good start, but writing improves much faster when you get clear feedback and regular practice.


You can book a private lesson bundle with a mother tongue teacher to work on:

  • essays, reviews, reports, articles and emails

  • grammar and vocabulary accuracy

  • Cambridge B2 First exam technique

  • speaking practice and mock tests

  • personalised feedback on your writing


We are also developing a new B2 Writing Booster area with premium tutorials, downloadable resources and AI-powered writing feedback.


For now, you can choose a private lesson plan here:


 
 
 

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