Module code: 633

πŸ“š pathway 69078f3349550

Attend Something vs Attend To Something: A Complete Guide

Core PathWay

1 The Big Difference: One Little Word Changes Everything

Here’s something that confuses many English learners: the verb attend completely changes its meaning when you add the tiny word to.

Attend something = go to an event or participate in an activity
– I attend a meeting every Monday morning.
– She attends university in London.
– Did you attend the conference last week?

Attend to something = deal with a problem or look after a task
– The manager needs to attend to a problem with the client.
– Can you attend to this urgent matter?
– I’ll attend to your request immediately.

βœ“ Think of it this way: Without ‘to’, you’re physically going somewhere. With ‘to’, you’re giving something your attention and care.

The difference is huge! If your boss says ‘Please attend the meeting’, you need to go there. But if they say ‘Please attend to this problem’, you need to solve it or take care of it.

πŸ’¬ Dialogue 1: Scheduling Conflicts

Two colleagues discussing their busy schedules and priorities

Maya: “Tom, are you free this afternoon? I really need someone to help me with something urgent.”
Tom: “I have to attend a meeting at 2 PM, but I’m free after that. Why? What’s going on?”
Maya: “There’s an urgent problem with the Johnson account. Someone needs to attend to it today or we might lose the client.”
Tom: “Oh, that does sound serious. What kind of issue is it exactly? Is it something I can handle, or do you need someone from finance?”
Maya: “It’s a billing error that you could definitely deal with. The problem is their invoice shows the wrong amount, and they’re quite upset about it.”
Tom: “I see. Well, my meeting should finish around 3:30. Can it wait until then, or should I ask someone else to attend the meeting for me?”
Maya: “Actually, 3:30 would work fine. I can take care of the initial response now, and then you can attend to the details this afternoon when you’re free.”
Tom: “Perfect! That’s a good plan. Send me the file before my meeting, and I’ll look at it quickly. Then I can handle everything properly after 3:30.”

2 Attend Something: Going Places and Joining Activities

When we use attend something (without ‘to’), we’re talking about being present at an event or activity. This is similar to go to or participate in, but sounds more formal.

Common things we attend:
Attend a meeting (go to a meeting)
Attend a class or course
Attend a conference or seminar
Attend a wedding or funeral
Attend an appointment
Attend university or school

Examples in context:
– ‘I have to attend a meeting at 3 PM today.’
– ‘How many people attended the training session?’
– ‘She attends yoga classes twice a week.’
– ‘Will you attend the presentation tomorrow?’

βœ“ In casual conversation, native speakers often use go to instead: ‘I’m going to a meeting’ sounds less formal than ‘I’m attending a meeting.’
βœ“ You can also participate in these events, which means you actively take part rather than just being present.

πŸ’¬ Dialogue 2: Training Session Dilemma

Two coworkers discussing whether to attend a training session

Sarah: “Hey Jake, are you going to the training session on Friday? I heard it’s really useful for our team.”
Jake: “Which one? I have to attend two different sessions this week, so I’m getting a bit confused about the schedule!”
Sarah: “The one about customer service. I think it’s at 10 AM on Friday morning in the main conference room.”
Jake: “Oh, I can’t attend that one, unfortunately. I have to attend to some urgent emails from clients in the morning. They’ve been waiting since Monday.”
Sarah: “That’s too bad. Can’t someone else look after those emails for you? The training is only two hours, and it might really help with client communication.”
Jake: “I wish someone could, but these are my responsibility. The clients specifically asked for me to deal with their questions. However, is there another session later in the month?”
Sarah: “Yes, there’s one on the 25th at 2 PM. Maybe you could attend that session instead? By then, you’ll have dealt with all your urgent client emails.”
Jake: “That’s perfect! I’ll sign up for that one right now. Thanks for checking, Sarah. And if you need anyone to go to Friday’s session with you, maybe ask Lisa?”

3 Attend To Something: Dealing With Problems and Taking Care of Tasks

When we use attend to something (with ‘to’), we mean giving something our attention, care, or action. This is similar to deal with or look after.

Common things we attend to:
Attend to a problem (solve or fix it)
Attend to an urgent matter
Attend to a customer or client
Attend to someone’s needs
Attend to the details
Attend to your responsibilities

Examples in context:
– ‘The receptionist will attend to you in a moment.’ (help you, serve you)
– ‘I need to attend to this issue before I leave.’ (deal with this problem)
– ‘Can you attend to the client’s request?’ (take care of what the client needs)
– ‘She’s attending to an urgent situation right now.’ (handling an emergency)

βœ“ Deal with is more common in everyday speech: ‘I need to deal with this problem’ = ‘I need to attend to this problem’
βœ“ Look after works well for ongoing care: ‘She looks after the accounts’ = ‘She attends to the accounts’
βœ“ Handle and take care of are also good alternatives: ‘Can you handle this?’ = ‘Can you attend to this?’

4 Common Mistakes to Avoid

Many learners mix up these two forms. Here are the most common mistakes:

❌ ‘I need to attend the problem.’ β†’ βœ“ ‘I need to attend to the problem.’
❌ ‘She attends to meetings every day.’ β†’ βœ“ ‘She attends meetings every day.’
❌ ‘Can you attend my question?’ β†’ βœ“ ‘Can you attend to my question?’ (or better: ‘Can you answer my question?’)
❌ ‘I attended to the conference.’ β†’ βœ“ ‘I attended the conference.’

Remember:
– Events, activities, places β†’ attend (no ‘to’)
– Problems, tasks, needs β†’ attend to

βœ“ Quick test: Can you physically go there? Use attend. Do you need to solve or care for it? Use attend to.
βœ“ When in doubt in casual situations, use simpler words: go to for events, deal with for problems.

5 Practice Dialogue 1: At the Office

See how both forms work in a real workplace conversation:

Maya: Tom, are you free this afternoon?

Tom: I have to attend a meeting at 2 PM, but I’m free after that. Why?

Maya: There’s an urgent problem with the Johnson account. Someone needs to attend to it today.

Tom: What kind of issue is it?

Maya: They’re unhappy with the delay in their order. Can you deal with it after your meeting?

Tom: Sure, I’ll attend to it as soon as the meeting finishes. Should I call them or visit their office?

Maya: A phone call should be enough. Just make sure you handle their concerns carefully.

Tom: No problem. I’ll take care of it this afternoon.

6 Practice Dialogue 2: Making Plans

Here’s how these phrases work in a more casual context:

Sarah: Are you going to the training session on Friday?

Jake: Which one? I have to attend two different sessions this week.

Sarah: The one about customer service. I think it’s at 10 AM.

Jake: Oh, I can’t attend that one. I have to attend to some urgent emails from clients in the morning.

Sarah: Can’t someone else look after those emails?

Jake: Not really. They’re my responsibility. But I’ll participate in the afternoon session instead.

Sarah: There isn’t an afternoon session. Maybe you should ask your manager which is more important.

Jake: Good idea. I’ll deal with that now and see what she says.

7 Using Synonyms Naturally

While attend and attend to are useful, native speakers often use simpler alternatives in everyday conversation. Here’s when to use each:

For events and activities:
– Formal: ‘I’ll attend the conference.’ (business emails, official communication)
– Neutral: ‘I’m going to the conference.’ (everyday speech)
– Active: ‘I’ll participate in the conference.’

For problems and tasks:
– Formal: ‘I’ll attend to this matter.’ (business writing, professional contexts)
– Common: ‘I’ll deal with this problem.’ (most common in speech)
– Caring: ‘I’ll look after this for you.’ (when helping someone)
– Casual: ‘I’ll handle it.’ or ‘I’ll take care of it.’ (friendly, reassuring)

βœ“ In professional emails, attend and attend to sound more polished.
βœ“ In conversation, go to and deal with are more natural.
βœ“ Choose based on your situation and who you’re talking to!

8 Your Turn: Quick Practice

Choose the correct form for each situation:

1. ‘I need to _____ the weekly team meeting.’ (attend / attend to)
2. ‘Can you _____ this customer complaint?’ (attend / attend to)
3. ‘She _____ university in Manchester.’ (attends / attends to)
4. ‘The doctor will _____ you shortly.’ (attend / attend to)
5. ‘How many people _____ the wedding?’ (attended / attended to)

Answers:
1. attend (it’s an event you go to)
2. attend to (it’s a problem you need to deal with)
3. attends (university is a place you go to)
4. attend to (the doctor will help you, look after you)
5. attended (a wedding is an event)

βœ“ Remember: If you can replace it with go to or participate in, use attend. If you can replace it with deal with or look after, use attend to.
🎯 Main event Vocabulary Acquisition System Unlock β†’ then consolidate with Matching & Recall practice modes
πŸ”’

Member-Exclusive Vocabulary Review & Acquisition System

Vocabulary practice stats and progress dashboard preview

This isn’t a simple quiz β€” it’s a fully tracked learning system. You build knowledge through recognition, then recall, and your progress feeds directly into the Integrated Practice Bar (Writing tasks, AI Chat, and more).

  • Practice sessions, accuracy, and response-time tracking
  • Term strength levels (Learning β†’ Stable β†’ Strong)
  • Personal progress history for each unit

This feature is available to YSP members.

Explore Membership Benefits
← Previous Page 1 of 1 Next (Coming Soon) β†’