The Logo That Opened a Door
A small piece of work can open a very big door.
Sofia is a graphic designer in Bucharest who wants more than her quiet agency job. When an email arrives from a company in Chicago, one old project turns out to matter more than she expected.
This is a short story about Sofia, a graphic designer in Romania who hopes for a new opportunity. Before you listen, three words to know:
Listen to the whole story once. Focus on the big picture, not the small details. Then tap the Questions button on the player, type your answer, and reveal the suggested one to compare.
Sofia is a graphic designer whowho · joins extra information about a person. lives in Bucharest. For three years, she has worked at a small agency wherewhere · joins information about a place. the pay is low but the people are kind. She enjoys her job, but she wants a bigger challenge.
One gray Monday morning, Sofia opened an email thatthat · joins information about a person or thing. surprised her. It came from a company based in Chicago that was looking for a designer who could work from home. The message asked for a portfolio, whichwhich · joins information about a thing or idea. is a collection of a designer’s best work.
Sofia thought about all the projects that she had finished. The one that she was most proud of was a logo that she designed for a small bakery. The bakery, where she bought her morning coffee, was run by a woman who later became a loyal client.
Sofia sent her portfolio to a manager who was named Mr. Hill. Then she waited. The days that followed were long. She almost gave up on the job that she wanted so much.
On Friday, her phone rang. It was Mr. Hill, the man who would change her career.
“I like the logo that you made for the bakery,” he said. “It is the kind of design that we need. Can you tell me about your work?”
They talked for an hour about design, clients, and the team that Sofia would join. Mr. Hill explained the project that the company was starting and the skills that it required.
At the end of the call, he said the words that Sofia will never forget.
“You are the designer whomwhom · the formal object form of who. Recognize it — you can say who or that. we have been looking for. Welcome to the team.”
Sofia smiled. The small logo that she once made for a bakery had opened a very big door.
Listen again and read along with the transcript. Then tap the Questions button on the player and answer each one. Type your answer, then reveal the suggested one to compare.
Sofia is a graphic designer whowho · joins extra information about a person. lives in Bucharest. For three years, she has worked at a small agency wherewhere · joins information about a place. the pay is low but the people are kind. She enjoys her job, but she wants a bigger challenge.
One gray Monday morning, Sofia opened an email thatthat · joins information about a person or thing. surprised her. It came from a company based in Chicago that was looking for a designer who could work from home. The message asked for a portfolio, whichwhich · joins information about a thing or idea. is a collection of a designer’s best work.
Sofia thought about all the projects that she had finished. The one that she was most proud of was a logo that she designed for a small bakery. The bakery, where she bought her morning coffee, was run by a woman who later became a loyal client.
Sofia sent her portfolio to a manager who was named Mr. Hill. Then she waited. The days that followed were long. She almost gave up on the job that she wanted so much.
On Friday, her phone rang. It was Mr. Hill, the man who would change her career.
“I like the logo that you made for the bakery,” he said. “It is the kind of design that we need. Can you tell me about your work?”
They talked for an hour about design, clients, and the team that Sofia would join. Mr. Hill explained the project that the company was starting and the skills that it required.
At the end of the call, he said the words that Sofia will never forget.
“You are the designer whomwhom · the formal object form of who. Recognize it — you can say who or that. we have been looking for. Welcome to the team.”
Sofia smiled. The small logo that she once made for a bakery had opened a very big door.
This story is built on relative clauses — short pieces of information that tell us more about a person, a thing, or a place. Look back at the transcript and find one example of each pronoun below. For each, ask: is it telling me about a person, a thing, or a place?
| Pronoun | Used for | Example line from the story |
|---|---|---|
| who | people | “a graphic designer who lives in Bucharest” |
| which | things / ideas | “a portfolio, which is a collection of a designer’s best work” |
| that | people or things | “an email that surprised her” / “the projects that she had finished” |
| where | places | “a small agency where the pay is low” |
Type who, which, that, or where in each gap. More than one answer can be correct — type yours, then reveal the key to check.
Complete each sentence about the story from memory. Each blank needs a full relative clause (using who, which, that, or where). There is more than one good answer — type yours, then reveal an example.
2. …that was looking for a designer. / …that is based in Chicago.
3. …that she made for a small bakery.
4. …where she bought her morning coffee.
5. …who called her. / …who changed her career.
You listened, noticed how relative clauses work, and used them yourself. Come back any time to listen again — repetition is how the grammar sticks.
