- Is it appropriate to use the salutation Dear All in a work email?
I have observed that in my work place, whenever a mail is sent to more than one person( like an information, meeting request or a notice etc ), the mail starts with the salutation "Dear All" This,
- Is there a difference between Therefor and Therefore? [closed]
Therefor means for that For example: Here we sell guitars and accessories therefor Therefor is one of a whole series of adverbs: thereof (of that), thereafter (after that), therein (in there), etc If you are familiar with German - the Germanic sister of English - you can find a direct analogy there: for = für therefor, for that = dafür (literally, therefor) Therefore, as you must know
- How should the punctuation work for and, therefore,?
It’s difficult to say for certain without seeing an actual sentence However, a comma is frequently used before and when it joins two clauses, (see?) and, since therefore is a weak interruption it, too, (like too, see?) may be set off by a pair of commas That background suggests that the first solution might be the most appropriate one
- Why can so be a conjunction, but not hence, therefore, thus,
Your grammar teacher is probly not playing with the full deck of parts of speech Saying something is an adverb is a confession of ignorance And if so is a conjunction, so are hence, therefore, and thus There are a lot of subordinate conjunctions, of various classes, all of which are adverbial in one way or another; mostly, they all introduce adverbial clauses
- Fine semantic differences between thus and therefore
Therefore is used in introducing a conclusion that follows from what has been said previously You are drunk, and that makes you incapable of operating machinery Therefore you shouldn't fly a plane Thus means in this way For example: He waved his arms around thus (speaker waves arms around in demonstration) Extending that meaning, it can be used to introduce the intended consequences of an
- Therefore I or I therefore [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
Therefore - (adverb) "because of that", "for that reason" Not a word I would use in ordinary conversation, but very useful in the written language "I, therefore, suggest that " x "Therefore, I suggest that " Semantically speaking, I can see no difference between them The former, however, seems to emphasize the subject
- Should there always be a comma after therefore,However etc. ?
Should you always type a comma after "therefore","however" etc in the beginning of a sentence? Also, when these (and similar) words are used in the middle of a sentence, should there be a comma or semi-colon before and after the word?
- Difference in logical inevitability between therefore thus hence
The adverbs thus, therefore and hence can be used to express connections of causation and logical implication of several kinds Although, when used in this way, these words are usually close in meaning and often can be used interchangeably, they do have important differences
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