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forward vs forwarded - WordReference Forums I you we they forward our mail to the central office He she it forwards our mail automatically He she it forwarded all our mail last month to China while we were away on assignment Like cyberpedant, I don't understand the problem "Forwarded" is the past participle of "to forward"
forward to vs forward it to | WordReference Forums Yes, If the executive assistant had been writing a formal letter, he would have written: You may send me more information (preferably in the form of several relevant screen-capture images photos if possible) and I will forward it to GS immediately However, he was writing a very quick email to one one of his [fellow] employees, the message was a simple instruction and he therefore wrote with
Going forward vs. Moving forward - WordReference Forums Because "Moving forward" is often said after some kind of dispute, where "moving forward" reflects an attempt to leave the bad feelings behind, I will use "going forward" or "in the future" or "from now on"
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
move the meeting up an hour | WordReference Forums To answer your 2nd Q: I would say to move a meeting forward or back Moving a meeting "up an hour" sound awkward to my BE ears and begs for a clarifying question, to be on the safe side, e g “back or forward?”
look forward to for - WordReference Forums to look forward for might be used where you mean to look forward to be a metaphor for to concentrate on the future, and for to be a normal prepositional use For example: I am looking forward for my children that is I am concentrating on the future for the benefit of my children
put back forward push back forward (schedule event etc. ) push forward 3 To change the scheduled time of some event to an earlier time: They pushed the meeting forward from 3:00 to 1:30 I found some threads regarding "put back" (this for example) but most of the discussions were about whether "put back" is a natural expression when meaning postponing something
keep me on copy - how to say it very polite? - WordReference Forums Hello, I would like to write the same sentence in a polite form I finally got a proper e-mail account Please keep me on copy in all the refer to editorial and sound departamets Thank you very much, Rebeca Can I say that?
forward to lt; meet meeting gt; you [gerund or infinitive?] Sometimes "to" is followed by an infinitive verb, but some other times it's followed by a gerund "I am looking forward to meet you tonight " "I am looking forward to meeting you tonight " Which one is correct and what is the rule? Thank you
forward vs. send - WordReference Forums Forward makes some sense if somebody else previously sent the file to whoever you are writing to If you aren't trying to express that idea, you should use send instead