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- Hello, This is vs My Name is or I am in self introduction
I am from India and not a native English speaker I do often hear people introducing themselves like "Hello everyone; This is James" Is it an acceptable form in native English? Usually, I know t
- How to inform the link of a scheduled online meeting in formal emails . . .
I am writing a formal email to someone to send him the link of a scheduled online meeting I have already acknowledged him before about the meeting I can not figure out the most appropriate and fo
- what is the difference between on, in or at a meeting?
You are too quick to dismiss on; the idea that on suggests a house call is rather old-fashioned— such a case would more likely be expressed as being out on a call Similarly, on can be used in reference to items on an agenda, and so my assistant might say I am on a meeting, on lunch, or on training if asked for
- Bought vs Have bought - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I bought a new cell phone I have bought a new cell phone What is the difference?
- When to use I or I am - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do I get it? Instead, you can save this post to reference later
- Which is correct? . . . purchased from in at your store
From is probably the best choice, but all of them are grammatically correct, assuming the purchase was made from a physical store From emphasizes the transaction over the location If you wanted to emphasize that the purchase was made in person instead of from the store's website, you might use in
- word choice - Discussion versus discussions? - English Language . . .
In the same context, I have come across the usage of 'discussion' and 'discussions' For example: We thank abc and xyz for useful discussion We thank abc and xyz for useful discussions Is one o
- idioms - On one hand vs on the one hand. - English Language . . .
I'm confused because I've seen both mentioned in dictionaries Example sentence (context: writing a story): On (the) one hand, I want to wrap up everything perfectly On the other hand, I want to
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