- looking forward to lt;see gt; lt;seeing gt; you | WordReference Forums
Hi there, I saw my classmate said 'I'm looking forward to seeing you' Is this correct? If so, what is the difference between: 1 I'm looking forward to see you 2 I'm looking forward to seeing you Appreciate your reply:) Lisa
- Look forward to - WordReference Forums
1 Looking forward to meet see welcome you 2 Look forward to meeting seeing welcoming you Are these grammatically correct? Using ing with look, like in first sentence we don't have to use ing with verb (see, meet etc) and in second sentence look without ing and verb with ing, Are my sentences right?
- Going forward vs. Moving forward - WordReference Forums
Because "Moving forward" is often said after some kind of dispute, where "moving forward" reflects an attempt to leave the bad feelings behind, I will use "going forward" or "in the future" or "from now on"
- forward vs forwarded - WordReference Forums
I you we they forward our mail to the central office He she it forwards our mail automatically He she it forwarded all our mail last month to China while we were away on assignment Like cyberpedant, I don't understand the problem "Forwarded" is the past participle of "to forward"
- Going forward = in (the) future? - WordReference Forums
People speaking in an office environment use 'going forward' to mean in the future, from this point " According to a few existing WR threads discussing about "in the future vs in future" which I've just checked, BE speakers use "in future" to mean "from now on" and "in the future" to mean at some point in the future
- Im looking forward to hear hearing from you? - WordReference Forums
Ejemplos: I look forward to hearing from you, I look forward to seeing you I am looking forward to: working with you, living with you, spending the rest of my life with you, starting over, etc , etc , etc Lo es, JB, la explicación es totalmente correcta, y los ejemplos también And, thanks for the comments! I thought I was the sweet one!
- move the meeting up an hour | WordReference Forums
To answer your 2nd Q: I would say to move a meeting forward or back Moving a meeting "up an hour" sound awkward to my BE ears and begs for a clarifying question, to be on the safe side, e g “back or forward?”
- Look Looking forward to - WordReference Forums
El verbo to look forward to siempre va seguido de un gerundio porque el "To" es una preposición, seguida sólamente por un gerundio I look forward to hearing from you I am looking forward to going to the zoo, no to go to the zoo
|