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- look forward to for - WordReference Forums
to look forward for might be used where you mean to look forward to be a metaphor for to concentrate on the future, and for to be a normal prepositional use For example: I am looking forward for my children that is I am concentrating on the future for the benefit of my children
- Your cooperation in this regard will be highly appreciated. Pejorative . . .
While I agree with Fabulist that "Your cooperation in this regard would be highly appreciated" would be less of a command than "Your cooperation in this regard will be highly appreciated", I would still bridle at "Your cooperation in this regard would be highly appreciated " It may work in some varieties of English But in mine it would be decidedly irritating
- look forward to seeing you hope to see you - WordReference Forums
EXAMPLE: I look forward to seeing you in September!- We have a plan that I am happy about and looking forward to--a definite plan I look forward to seeing you very soon ---No definite plan but I hope it happens You use ESPERO VERLO in both cases?? Your question is confusing because you have used "look forward to" in both of your examples
- keep me on copy - how to say it very polite? - WordReference Forums
Hello, I would like to write the same sentence in a polite form I finally got a proper e-mail account Please keep me on copy in all the refer to editorial and sound departamets Thank you very much, Rebeca Can I say that?
- expressing our appreciation for presence - WordReference Forums
We've sent an invitation for our business partners The invitation was about our business policy briefing and it is very formal We've gotten replies and now we know how many of them are coming Now, we want to send them a notification of where, when it will be held and so on In original
- 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?
- Please forward this email to lt;whoever whomever gt; is working on the . . .
I know that after preposition you should use Whom and not who How about whoever and Whomever? Please forward this email to whoever is working on the project Or Please forward this email to whomever is working on the project
- 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?”
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