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Please let me know if following salutions are acceptable in Taiwan: 1) Hi 2) Hey 3) Hiya 4) Hello 5) Dear XYZ 6) Dear Mr. XYZ 7) Dear Mr. FirstName LastName 8) Respected XYZ /Sameer
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Greetings, Tina, Mister Micawber's answers are completely relevant, but let me make some additional remarks: 1. A time of prosperity and peace - is a noun phrase you analysed absolutely correctly. In general, noun phrases may have the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
3 days ago 2:43 pm
Articles, Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Noun Phrases, Direct Objects, Determiners, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Phrases, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Salutations
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Greetings, my friend. I looked at this a few hours ago and gave up on it. I'm glad you tackled it. I'm too old to fight about using subjective case for objects. But my instincts let me down on what modifies what. (I know CJ thinks worring
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Hello, my name is Alex, and i come from Germany, i am almost 17 years old and i'm very interested in improving my english. Im looking forward to study english. It would be great to get to know some nice people here :) greetings
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Greetings, LiveinJapan, the following rephrasing is possible Speaking English is a matter of not only using proper grammar, but also understanding the culture in which it is spoken. (correlative conjunction not only... but also should be in
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Greetings, Rajivme, one possible correction could be He enjoys gifting me with pens so much that he gives them to me every time we meet. (In this sentence, the repetition of the verb 'gift' and the pronoun 'me' is avoided; the
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"How are you doing?" is a common informal greeting, it is like an extended version of saying "Hi." It is not so much a literal question, it is more like a warm greeting said in the spirit of "conversation starter" or
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Look in any grammar book or book about business English--they should have sample letters. These letters will give you the general form for a letter: DATE NAME OF PERSON HIS ADDRESS GREETING BODY OF LETTER THE COMPLIMENTARY CLOSE YOUR
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Hi,
just to reiterate, say someone tells you "hey I saw jack & jil yesterday and they said hi to (saluted) you and said very nice things about you". You need capital letters here.
Question 1: I want to thank this person
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just to reiterate, say someone tells you "hey I saw jack & jil yesterday and they said hi to (saluted) you and said very nice things about you". Question 1: I want to thank this person for telling me that. what is the common way to
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