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Dear Sir or Madam, I am Corazon Devu, Managing Director of ______________ under the company name of XX. I am a citizen of __. I am currently residing at __. In regard to my sponsorship for Rica Martin , I would like to request approval of her
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mister micawber
37 days ago
Regards, Marriage, Relationships, Business, Countries, Careers, Australia, Christmas, Holidays, Letters, Sponsorship Letter, Sponsorship
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Here is the letter I composed, please check and do some revisions if needed. I'm not too good in writing so hopefully u can help me how to make it better.
Dear Sir or Madam,
I’m Corazon Devu, Managing Director of ______________
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
37 days ago
Regards, Grammar, Marriage, Relationships, Business, Countries, France, Careers, Australia, Christmas, Holidays, Letters, Correcting, Sponsorship Letter, Sponsorship
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I agree with Philip's comments, but will add my two cents on a couple: 2. ... if/whether she would even consider Christmas ... (This refers to the setting of a future wedding date. Using "regarded" would amount to asking about the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
yankee
62 days ago
Weddings, Dates, Marriage, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Conversational, Christmas, Holidays, Ceremonies
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Can someone help me with this? 1 She's pretty but she's not pretty enough to embarass yourself over/She's not worth embarrassing yourself over./ She's not worth sitting next to even if she is pretty. 2 I asked her explicitly if
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Bert! Avert your eyes! New Sherlock Holmes Film to Explore Homoerotic Relationship Between Lead Characters New York Post Tuesday, August 04, 2009 Guy Ritchie's plan to put a gay spin on the relationship of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson in his
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I'll do it. Some have more than one meaning. If that is the case, I made a guess as to which meaning is most common or the one that I think you want. Out of context, it's impossible to be sure.
1. Shaken up. Discombobulated. I was
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I read that Peter Watkins' film "Privilege" has been released on DVD. It got *very* limited release when it was made, and practtically no air play. Well worth seeing out. A prescient film for its time.
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
mc
187 days ago
Interviews, Marriage, Countries, United States, Colours, Relationships, Careers, Business, Great Britain, Ireland, Arts, American, Holidays, Context, Easter
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My new screenplay has a scene where the two characters are revealing their autobiographies to each other, and they are ... other about their pasts; however, I don't see how to do it without the way-too-long-to-be-cinematically-palatable
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
2.71828183
188 days ago
Universities, Marriage, Jokes, Countries, United States, Relationships, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Schools, Students, Christmas, Holidays, Sentences
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They're both correct. You'd choose depending on where you are when you say it. If you're at home, your wife might say, "Why didn't you ever bring home the present they gave you at the office Christmas party?" If
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1. The doctor is seeing/treating children at the pediatric clinic . -- "at the pediatrics" is wrong, and I'm guessing you're referring to a clinic. If not, then substitute the correct noun.
2. It's two p.m. now. (here
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