- I forwarded to you vs I forwarded you - WordReference Forums
Hello everyone, what is the right sentence between the following? 1) "I wanted to ask to you about the protocol I forwarded to you" 2) "I wanted to ask to you about the protocol I forwarded you" The context is an e-mail Thanks
- Im looking forward to it is wrong? | WordReference Forums
If you are in the process of "looking forward" to your trip right now, then I would say "am looking forward" is better than "look forward " You could say, "I look forward to the trip every day " However, that would mean that you do so occasionally, as little as once a day, but that you are not doing it continuously, and that you are not thinking about it at the time you are talking about this
- forward on to forward to - WordReference Forums
Someone asks you if you have certain data, which he needs, and you say yes Which would you say, 1 or 2? What's the difference between them? 1 I'll be forwarding them on to you 2 I'll be forwarding them to you
- forward - WordReference Forums
Is forward thinking hyphenated? ThanksGood to know Bruce I may call on you to help with questions about programming in the Resource Forum if you are willing, of course I'm used to an AS 400 or iSeries environment, where the code works Thus my sarcastic attitude towards the folks who brought us the blue screen of death, and 15 years of Ctrl+Alt+Del! I write to you with a Mac, so my
- Look forward to - WordReference Forums
1 Looking forward to meet see welcome you 2 Look forward to meeting seeing welcoming you Are these grammatically correct? Using ing with look, like in first sentence we don't have to use ing with verb (see, meet etc) and in second sentence look without ing and verb with ing, Are my sentences right?
- From that moment lt;on, onward, forward, backward gt;
And I have two questions related to this: 1- Has "forward" the exact same meaning as "on" or "onwards" ? 2- Can I say instead: " From that moment backwards, he had always behave very childish but now he decided " ? In my opinion, this latest sentence is a awkward-sounding one, but I am just wondering Thanks in advance!!
- from . . . vs from…forward on - WordReference Forums
I think you do need to add from that time on (meaning ever since that time), or – in a formal literary style – from that day forward Just “from that time” is potentially ambiguous, and much less idiomatic If you modify it in a different way, such as from the time when something specific happened, you can’t also use on or onwards, etc
- Move: forward, back, left right, etc. | WordReference Forums
Hey everyone, I want to ask about the direction for two words mentioned above 1> MOVE MOVE FORWARDS MOVE TO LEFT MOVE TO THE RIGHT MOVE BACK - Is the my expression for directions correct ? and
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