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Difference between being at of in someones service To be at (someone's) service means that you are offering (or someone else has offered) your (usually temporary) help to someone, in a formal and deferential manner
grammar - Is it disappointed with, in, or by? - English Language . . . Disappointed with (object) - an object of neutral gender E g: I am disappointed with your service Disappointed over - an incidence Disappointed in with - very similar but slightly different connotation 'In' is more personal and conveys reflection on the individual 'With' is more used for disappointment over an isolated incidence
formality - Your Grace, Your Majesty, Your Highness. . . Does it all mean . . . They're definitely different in that you use them for different people! Your Grace is for dukes and duchesses; Your Majesty is for the King and Queen; Your (Royal) Highness is for princes, princesses, their spouses, etc But do they mean something different - well, to some extent they all just mean "hey you"
When you {complete have completed} your service Here’s the difference From your examples: Let’s look at #2 first 2 ) When you have completed your service you will retire on (a) pension This is a conditional “When you have completed” is not the past tense, it’s the future conditional And it’s followed by {you will retire on pension} That’s the future too, so the two tenses match That’s looking pretty good Now how about
What do you call a person whos receiving a service? 1 It's difficult to say you are receiving a service officially if no framework is being used that provides a definite start stop to the relationship If a social worker is going to random people and trying to get them in a program, probably the most correct and neutral term is candidate Once in a program they can be considered a member or client
Please Find Attached or Please Find Enclosed in a formal email? Please find attached "Monthly status report" PDF for your reference would be appropriate; you cannot enclose anything in an email because they don't have envelopes However (in my opinion) a more formal phrasing would be something like Please find the pdf "Monthly status report" attached for your reference or, shortly put Please find the file attached for your reference if it is clear what
word choice - regardless of vs regardless if vs regardless of if . . . regardless of your opinion [of + noun] regardless of whether you want me to or not [followed by whether] Personally, I would not use "regardless of if you don't want me to" As the clause "if you don't want me to" cannot come after "regardless of" For me, that is not grammatical
prepositions - English Language Learners Stack Exchange They say I'm pleased with your work \\ performance (the noun implies duty or effort) I'm pleased about your wedding \\ promotion (the noun is about some event) Is there a difference in mean