- What can I call other students if I am also a student?
0 Fellow students sound okay and matured So to my own knowledge of understanding, I will advise students to use fellow students instead of my colleagues, because colleagues is more to working class
- Should I use capital or small letter here? Dear All or Dear all?
The capitalization does not make it polite or impolite If I were writing this, and sending it to my colleagues, I would write "Dear Colleagues," I do not like "DearAll," and prefer to address the people receiving the email; "Dear Cisco Employees Sales Team 2015 Award Winers," etc
- nouns - Colleagues or Colleagues? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
Here is the context: Please enter a colleagues email address: My coworker believes that in this context, it should be colleagues I think that because it is a possessive noun, that it should be
- What would you call the colleagues of someone in a cohort . . .
What would you call the "colleagues" of someone in a cohort (specifically educational context)? Ask Question Asked 8 years, 10 months ago Modified 3 years, 8 months ago
- How do you greet multiple recipients in an e-mail?
How do you greet multiple recipients in an e-mail? Assuming they're both male, I just use "Sirs", but it seems a bit informal
- Formal writing: …for my colleagues and {I me myself}. ?
Because the letter of proposal is formal, I feel the phrase, for my colleagues and me, is jarring I want to change it to for my colleagues and I, but the antecedent requires an object You would not say: “This is a request to cover the cost […] for I” So, why use the subject pronoun I in the expression “my colleagues and…”?
- Is it appropriate to use the salutation Dear All in a work email?
If you are suggesting something formal, talking from position of rights or power, you may want to use more formal "Dear Colleagues" to make the argument stronger If you are making a proposal, and want to downplay it as in "hey, it's an idea, a basis for further thinking and please judge it as such", a simple 'All,' would do a better job
- word usage - business partners vs. colleagues - English Language . . .
According to the definition you yourself quote, colleagues are people who work together One's business partners, again according to the quotation in the answer, are the people who share the responsibility for the financial aspects of the business, not necessarily for its day-to-day operation
|