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  1. 2nd Grade ELA
  2. Formal and Informal English

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2ND GRADE ELA • LANGUAGE

Formal and Informal English

Learn when to use your "polite" words and when it's okay to be casual!

Section 1

Why Do We Talk Differently to Different People?

Have you ever noticed that you talk one way to your best friend and another way to your teacher? People have been doing this for a very long time! Let's look at how people started using formal and informal language.

Long, Long Ago
People first spoke only to their own families and small groups. Everyone talked the same way to each other, like friends.
Kings and Queens
When kings and queens ruled, people had to talk very politely to them. They used special words like "Your Majesty." This was one of the first kinds of formal language.
Schools Start
When schools were built, teachers told children to use polite words in class. Students learned to say "Yes, ma'am" and "Please." This is still how we use formal English at school!
Today
Now we have many places to talk — at home, at school, at the store, and even online. We pick different words for each place. That is why we need to know about formal and informal English!

So here is the big question: How do you know which words to use and when? That is what this whole lesson is about!

Section 2

The Big Ideas

Formal English is the polite, careful way we talk or write. We use it with teachers, principals, and grown-ups we don't know well. Informal English is the relaxed, fun way we talk with friends and family. Both kinds are good! You just need to know when to use each one.

1

Formal = Polite & Careful

Use your best words. Say "May I please" instead of "Gimme." Write whole sentences.
2

Informal = Relaxed & Fun

Use everyday words. It's okay to say "Hey!" and "Cool!" Slang and short words are fine here.
3

Think About WHO

Ask yourself: "Who am I talking to?" A teacher? Use formal. Your best friend? Informal is great!
4

Think About WHERE

Ask yourself: "Where am I?" At a library? Be formal. On the playground? Informal is just fine!
✦ Key Takeaway
Think of it like your clothes! You wear nice clothes to a fancy dinner and comfy clothes to play outside. Formal English is like your nice clothes, and informal English is like your comfy clothes. You pick what fits the moment!
Section 3

See the Difference!

Look at this picture. On one side you can see formal words. On the other side you can see informal words. They mean the same thing, but they sound very different!

FORMALINFORMALFORMAL"Good morning!""Hey!""May I please have…""Can I get…""Thank you very much.""Thanks!""I am sorry.""My bad!""Goodbye.""See ya!""Yes, sir.""Yeah!"
Formal words are on the left. Informal words are on the right. They mean similar things!

See how the words on the left side sound more polite? The words on the right side sound more like what you'd say to a friend. Both sides are English. You just pick the right side for the right time!

Section 4

How Do You Pick?

When you need to talk or write, ask yourself three easy questions. These questions help you decide if you should use formal or informal English.

QUESTION 1Who am I talking to?Teacher or principal → FormalFriend or brother/sister → InformalQUESTION 2Where am I?Classroom or library → FormalPlayground or your room → InformalQUESTION 3Why am I writing or talking?A book report or thank-you letter → FormalA note to a friend or a text → Informal
Ask these three questions every time you write or talk!

These three questions are like a little checklist in your head. If you are at school writing a report, the answers tell you to use formal English. If you are at recess talking to your buddy, the answers tell you informal English is just right!

EASY RULE TO REMEMBER
Formal = Fancy & Full Sentences Informal = Fun & Friendly Talk
Both are correct — they are just used at different times.
Section 5

Sort It Out: Formal vs. Informal

Let's look at even more examples! The table below shows things people say or write. You can see how the formal version is different from the informal version.

SituationFormalInformal
Saying hello"Good morning, Mrs. Lee.""Hi!"
Asking for help"Excuse me, could you help me?""Hey, can you help?"
Saying you like something"That is wonderful.""That's so cool!"
Starting a letter"Dear Mr. Smith,""Hey Jake!"
Ending a letter"Sincerely, Anna""Later! — Anna"
Saying no"No, thank you.""Nah."
The Language Spectrum
Formal
In the Middle
Informal
← Very FormalVery Informal →

Notice that language isn't just two boxes. Sometimes you can be a little bit formal but not super fancy. That's the middle of the bar above! For example, saying "Hi, Mrs. Lee" is a bit formal and a bit casual at the same time.

Section 6

Let's Try One Together!

Imagine you want to ask your teacher if you can go to the bathroom. Let's figure out the best way to say it, step by step.

Asking Your Teacher a Question

Step 1 — Who am I talking to?

You are talking to your teacher. A teacher is a grown-up who is in charge. That means you should lean toward formal language.

Step 2 — Where am I?

You are in the classroom. The classroom is a place where we use polite words. Another point for formal!

Step 3 — Why am I talking?

You are making a polite request. You need permission. So you should be extra respectful.

Step 4 — Pick the right words

Informal version: "I gotta go to the bathroom." Formal version: "May I please use the restroom?" The formal version is the better choice here! It uses the polite word "may" and the polite word "please."

Result ✓

The best thing to say is: "May I please use the restroom?" Great job — you matched the right words to the right place!
Section 7

When Is Each One Best?

Formal and informal English both have times when they work great and times when they don't fit. Let's compare!

Formal EnglishInformal English
Great for…School reports, thank-you cards, talking to adultsPlaying with friends, texting family, telling jokes
Sounds like…Polite, careful, grown-upFun, easy, quick
Uses…Full sentences, "please" and "thank you," no slangShort words, nicknames, slang like "cool" or "awesome"
Not the best fit for…Playing tag on the playground (too stiff!)A letter to the principal (too casual!)
✦ Key Takeaway
Neither one is "wrong." Imagine you have two pairs of shoes: rain boots and sneakers. Formal English is like rain boots — perfect when things need to be proper and careful. Informal English is like sneakers — perfect for running around and having fun. You just wear the right pair for the right weather!
Section 8

This Will Help You as You Grow!

Right now you are learning to spot the difference between formal and informal English. As you get bigger, you will use this skill in even more places! Here is what comes next:

What You Learn NowWhat Comes Later
Picking polite words for teachersWriting business letters and emails
Using "please" and "thank you"Giving speeches and presentations
Knowing when slang is okayChoosing a writing style for different readers
Writing a neat thank-you cardWriting a college essay someday!

Learning about formal and informal English now is like learning to ride a bike with training wheels. Soon you'll be zooming along without even thinking about it! Every time you pick the right words for the right moment, you are becoming a stronger reader and writer.

Section 9

Practice Time!

Let's see what you learned! Try each question. When you're ready, click "Show Answer" to check.

PROBLEM 1 — WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
What is formal English? Tell what it means in your own words.
PROBLEM 2 — PICK THE RIGHT ONE
You are writing a letter to your school librarian to ask for a new book. Which greeting should you use? A. "Yo, what's up!" B. "Dear Mrs. Ramirez,"
PROBLEM 3 — FORMAL OR INFORMAL?
Read this sentence: "Hey, wanna come over after school?" Is this sentence formal or informal? How can you tell?
PROBLEM 4 — FIX IT UP
Imagine you are meeting the mayor of your town. You want to say "Hi" and tell the mayor your name. Write a formal sentence you could say. Then write an informal one you might say to a friend instead.
PROBLEM 5 — THINK ABOUT IT
Your friend writes you a birthday card that says: "Dear Friend, I would like to wish you a very happy birthday. Sincerely, Jake." Does this sound right for a card from a friend? Why or why not? What would sound better?
Summary

Let's Remember Everything!

Today you learned that there are two main ways to use English. Formal English is the polite, careful kind — you use it with teachers, principals, and grown-ups, and in places like the classroom or in a letter. Informal English is the relaxed, friendly kind — you use it with friends and family, on the playground, or in a quick note.

To pick the right one, ask yourself three questions: Who am I talking to? Where am I? Why am I writing or talking? Neither kind is wrong — they are just different, like wearing fancy shoes or comfy sneakers. You are now a word-chooser superstar!

Varsity Tutors • 2nd Grade English Language Arts • Formal and Informal English