Verbs

Would like / I'd like: polite wants and offers

Level A2 Verbs
Key idea

'Would like' is the polite English way to say you want something, and it's the natural choice for ordering, requesting, and offering. Follow it with a noun or with 'to' + verb: "I'd like a glass of water" or "She'd like to leave early." To make a polite offer, turn it into a question: "Would you like some tea?" Don't confuse it with 'I like', which talks about a general preference rather than a present want, and never drop the 'to' before a verb (say "I'd like to book a table," not "I'd like book a table").

Examples

  • I'd like a glass of water. a polite request for water
  • Would you like some tea? offering tea politely
  • She'd like to leave early. she wants to leave early

The full lesson

Everything in the video, in text.

  1. I'd like…

    the polite way to want things

    Walk into a café and say I want a coffee — it can sound blunt, even rude. There's a softer phrase native speakers reach for instead.

  2. would like = a polite "want"

    That phrase is would like. It means want, but it sounds polite and gentle — the default for ordering, asking, and offering.

  3. Spoken, we contract it

    full
    • I would like
    • she would like
    spoken
    • I'd like
    • she'd like

    In speech we almost always shorten I would to I'd. So I would like becomes I'd like — that's the form you'll actually hear. I'd like.

  4. Two patterns

    + noun
    • a coffee
    • some water
    • the menu
    + to + verb
    • to book a table
    • to leave early

    There are two patterns. Follow it with a noun for a thing, or with to plus a verb for an action. Keep that little to — it's not optional.

  5. I'd like a glass of water.

    + noun

    Start with a thing. A noun follows directly. I'd like a glass of water.

  6. She'd like to leave early.

    + to + verb

    Now an action. Add to before the verb. She'd like to leave early.

  7. Would you like some tea?

    an offer

    To make an offer, turn it into a question: Would you like…? It's the warm, hospitable way to offer anything. Would you like some tea?

  8. Would you like to join us?

    offer + to + verb

    And the question works with to plus a verb too — perfect for inviting someone. Would you like to join us?

  9. I like coffee. a general preference (always)
    I'd like a coffee. a want, right now

    "like" = preference · "would like" = a present want

    Here's the big trap. I like coffee and I'd like a coffee are not the same. I like is a general preference, always true. I'd like is a want, right now.

  10. I'd like book a table. missing "to"
    I'd like to book a table. + to + verb

    Before a verb, always keep "to."

    And don't drop the to. Before a verb it's required — I'd like book a table is wrong. Say I'd like to book a table.

  11. Yes, I'd love some.

    accepting

    One more handy use: politely answering an offer with I'd love to or just Yes, please. Yes, I'd love some.

  12. Remember

    • I'd like + noun → a thing
    • I'd like to + verb → an action
    • Would you like…? → an offer

    So remember: I'd like plus a noun for a thing, plus to and a verb for an action, and Would you like…? to offer. Polite, every time.