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sentence: I'm being attended on(?)



 
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ESL Forums | English Vocabulary, Grammar and Idioms
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sentence: I'm being attended on(?) #1 (permalink) Wed Sep 23, 2009 5:50 am   sentence: I'm being attended on(?)
 

Hi,

When you go shopping, a clerk can ask you: Are you being waited on?
Then you can answer: I'm being waited on.

Then, my dictionary says wait on is similar to attend on.

Then, in a store, are the expressions below possible?

Are you being attended on? or I'm being attended on.

Maybe it's not common, I guess. What do you think?

Thanks,
sweetpumpkin
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sentence: I'm being attended on(?) #2 (permalink) Wed Sep 23, 2009 7:58 am   sentence: I'm being attended on(?)
 

Hi SP,

The expression I would use is 'attended to'. If an assistant comes up to you in a shop and asks if they can help and you have already had another assistant go and look for something for you, you would say: Thank you, I'm already being attended to/I'm already being looked after. 'Wait on' to me suggests when a waiter is looking after you in a restaurant.

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sentence: I'm being attended on(?) #3 (permalink) Wed Sep 23, 2009 8:02 am   sentence: I'm being attended on(?)
 

Hi,
I don't know exactly.But I think "wait on" roughly means "attend to".(NOT attend on)
It is normally used in a restaurant.
Regards,
Morteza
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sentence: I'm being attended on(?) #4 (permalink) Thu Sep 24, 2009 2:22 am   sentence: I'm being attended on(?)
 

Thank both of you. :) I'm very glad that I can get some precious knowledge from here that my conversation book doesn't say.
Sweetpumpkin
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sentence: I'm being attended on(?) #5 (permalink) Thu Sep 24, 2009 8:05 am   sentence: I'm being attended on(?)
 

Good morning Sweetpumpkin.

In England you will also often come across the phrase, "Are you being seen to?"

Your reply would be, "Yes, thank you."
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