Perfect Phrases for ESL Everyday Situations
Perfect Phrases for ESL Everyday Situations
CHAPTER 

The Post Office
The United States Postal Service (USPS) does much more than just deliver the mail. The USPS sells stamps, postal supplies, and money orders. It also sends mail and packages, including the necessary customs forms for sending mail and packages out of the country. For U.S. citizens, it has all the necessary forms for getting or renewing a passport—and will even take a passport photo.
Additionally, the post office has an active role in community affairs such as helping to find missing children, trying to locate bone marrow donors, alerting the neighborhood about wanted criminals, and performing other valuable services.
The USPS also can help customers connect with other government agencies.
Phrases You May Hear at the Post Office












Phrases to Say at the Post Office: Mailing













Phrases to Say at the Post Office: Services












Idioms and Other Vocabulary
Book: see Roll
Change-of-address cards: information cards you fill out to ensure that your mail is sent to the new address when you move
Forever Stamp: USPS term for a stamp without postage printed on it that is good no matter what the current postage rate is
Fragile: delicate, easily broken
Hazardous: dangerous
Hold my mail: keep my mail at the post office when I go away, so I can pick it up there when I return
Media Mail: USPS term for a postage rate that is cheaper than regular mail but can be used only for books and videos
Notice: communication sent to you from the post office (For example, sometimes the post office sends you notices about mail it is holding for you or other postal issues.)
Overnight: mail sent one day to be received the next day
Rent a post office box: pay for the use of a storage box at the post office that may be rented for a relatively small charge (Different-size post office boxes may be rented; your mail can be sent there instead of to your home or office.)
Return address: your address in the upper left corner (If the mail you are sending doesn’t arrive at the destination, this information can help the post office return it to you.)
Return receipt: receipt signed by person to whom you sent a letter or package
Roll (or sheet or book) of stamps: quantities of stamps that you may buy
Sheet: see Roll
Too large (or too thick or too heavy) for a first-class stamp: greater than the size or weight that you may mail for the price of one first-class stamp (Size or thickness may make it necessary to use additional postage.)
Tracking: following information about your mail to check the date and time it was delivered and who received it
Zip code: one of the five-digit numbers assigned to every area in the United States (The zip code helps the post office deliver the mail more easily.)