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Please reply to me how to write the "To Whom it may concern" to Visa section that our two manager will go to .. contry and for Factory visit.
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According to the "experts" whom I follow, both are "correct." Both are perfect examples of the hypothetical conditional using the famous (terrifying?) subjunctive. The book does NOT have endless pages, because it does NOT
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Hmm - might need a bit more of the context. It sounds as though Robin risked his life by defying Sir Guy & Prince John in order to save some other men, one of whom was a Norman - someone who would not be a natural ally of Robin.
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Thank you for the feedback, I, too, tried to interpret it as an imperative form but failed. To me it is not clear at all how this conclusion follows from the sentence's structure. Below I have condensed it to make the overall structure
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Hi,
You'll find a great deal of discussion of this phrase if you search the Forum for it.
Here's a very brief comment.
If you are writing to someone whose name you don't know, say 'Dear Sir or Madam'.
If you are
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According to LONGMAN to whom it may concern an expression written a t the beginning of a formal letter when you do not know the name of the person you want to communicate with.
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whe is the appropriate time to use the above//
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Have you ever seen the reconstructed Heaven's Gate? I hear it's quite good (if quite long). I spent an entire afternoon seeing it on tape after final exams when I was 14. Everybody had said that it bites pork flanks, but I was too curious
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If we're saying that 'whom' is the object here, where is the subject for 'will be?' Is 'most' the subject? Yes. or is 'the assitants?' No. _________ ... will be used for assistants . Most of them will be
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Yes, there are a few occasions when one would say "of who": "I was not aware of who Mr. Jones was" = "I was not aware of (Mr. Jones was who)." Your analysis is very thought-provoking. Yes, you could say: The offices
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