Practice Calling Customer Service in Hebraisk
Customer service calls in Hebraisk are stressful even for natives — long menus, busy operators, and the frustration of a problem you've already explained twice. This scenario walks through the phone conversation: navigating the IVR ('press 2 for billing'), greeting the agent, explaining the issue, and asking for escalation if you're not getting anywhere. You'll practise the polite formulas for complaints, the verbs for 'to refund', 'to cancel', 'to escalate', and the strong-but-courteous language to use when you need to push back.
Sample Hebraisk conversation
תודה שהתקשרת לשירות לקוחות. שמי לינגוארודו. במה אפשר לעזור לך היום?
Thank you for calling customer service. My name is Linguarudo. How can I help you today?יש לי שאלה על החשבון. אני חושב שיש טעות.
I have a question about my bill. I think there's an error.מצטער על כך. אפשר לקבל את מספר החשבון כדי לבדוק?
I'm sorry about that. Can I have your account number so I can look into it?מספר החשבון שלי 789456. חייבו אותי פעמיים החודש.
My account number is 789456. I was charged twice this month.אני רואה את הבעיה. אכן חויבת פעמיים. אני אעבד החזר מיד. זה צריך להופיע תוך 3-5 ימי עסקים.
I can see the issue. You were indeed charged twice. I'll process a refund right away. It should appear in 3-5 business days.תודה! בדיוק מה שהייתי צריך.
Thank you! That's exactly what I needed.
Hvad du lærer
- Navigate a Hebraisk-language phone menu
- Explain a billing or service issue clearly
- Request a refund, cancellation, or replacement
- Ask politely to speak to a supervisor
- Confirm what's been agreed and ask for a reference number
Ofte stillede spørgsmål
How do I open a customer service call in Hebraisk?
Greet, give your account number, and state the issue in one sentence. The scenario walks through this opener.
How do I ask for a supervisor in Hebraisk without being rude?
Use the polite escalation formula — 'I'd like to speak with a supervisor, please' — which is firm but not hostile. The scenario teaches it.
What's the Hebraisk for 'reference number' or 'case number'?
There's a specific term — included in the vocabulary list — that you should ask for at the end of every call.
How do I handle being put on hold for a long time in Hebraisk?
There's a polite re-engagement phrase — 'I'm still on the line' — that gets the agent's attention without sounding annoyed. The scenario covers it.