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politeness - At my earliest convenience - English Language Usage . . . At my convenience actually stresses the fact that the you will do whatever you are asked to whenever you may like or have spare time to do it, but whether it is 'rude' may also depend on personal opinion Ngram actually shows little usage of the expression
using at your convenience while asking a question? 0 I am writing an email for a professor in a university and asking some question about a program First, I asked the questions and in the ending paragraph I wrote: I would be grateful if you answer my questions at your best convenience Does it elevate the overall politeness of the mail or it is incorrect?
expressions - What is a friendlier way to write at the * preference . . . Here saying "At your preference" or "At your convenience" is polite enough The context I would assume here is to describe what a hypothetical family or citizen may choose to do Consider whether it is a family or an individual, a friendly word for citizen, being described Then whether they may want to do it or not is their preference
Other ways to say take your time whenever you can no rush? 7 At your (earliest) convenience (add earliest to indicate it needs to be as soon as possible) Meaning according to Collins Dictionary: "at a time suitable to you" 1 Another turn of phrase is (see this question and its comments for information about the use of this phrase): At a time of your choosing Attribution 1 "Definition of 'at Your
Is this correct way of replying with available dates for an interview Replying to a solicitation for a job interview should be done in the context of making such an interview convenient for the prospective employer, not the employee Further, any reply that narrowed opportunities to only a handful of dates can create the notion that interviewing for this prospective job is something you'll do if nothing better or more important appears on your schedule On that
Hyphenation in first century AD etc as an adjective Hyphenation is about so-called convenience, the communication of a phrase that becomes more understandable (less open to ambiguity) because of the hyphenation The essential question is, will anybody be likely to misinterpret the sentence if it's not hyphenated?
When to spell out or when the acronym itself is sufficient The next section of the document (which follows this first paragraph) provides definitions for all important words used in the document and provides their acronym (where applicable) Following this section is the rest of the document Do we need to spell out each acronym or can we just use the acronym itself given that it is already defined?