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Headquarters, singular or plural? | WordReference Forums The UN headquarters are in New York 2 the place from which military action is controlled: can be followed by a singular or plural verb McCreery established his headquarters at Treviso, just north of Venice a used for referring to the people in charge of a military operation: can be followed by a singular or plural verb
headquarters is vs headquarters are - WordReference Forums Depends whether "headquarters" is singular or plural If you're talking about the headquarters of one company (singular) for example, you would say: The headquarters of Company X is in Location Z If it's 2 or more companies (plural) then: The headquarters of Companies X and Y are in Location Z
headquarters head office - WordReference Forums Headquarters would most likely be plural when the word is used to refer to the people For example, if the important people from headquarters were coming to inspect the troops in some outpost somewhere, it would be "HQ (Headquarters) are coming on Thursday at noon," or similar
meeting in at headquarters - WordReference Forums Sorry for going back to this old topic but have a question - which one of these two is correct: - business meeting will be conducted at client's headquarters or - business meeting will be conducted in client's headquarters Thanks in advance for asking!
meeting in at [office] in at [building] - WordReference Forums The meeting will be held this Friday, May 15, at 6pm in at the installations of "CyberTrades"(an office of a business that sells computers) in at "Coworking Madrid" ( A building and the headquarters of the organization called "Coworking Madrid," inside of which the office of the computer business is located)
Come to your office VS go to your office VS come by I work at one of our company's departments, and want to send an email to a person whose office locates at a different department (the same area) that I'm coming by In my email, should I say - I will come to your office at 2pm - I will go to your office at 2pm - I will come by your office
warmly welcome somebody vs. (a) warm welcome to somebody Hey guys, I'm a newcomer here, nice to join all of you! I am now working on a welcome board for a meeting to be held in my company tommorrow And I'm trying to figure out whether it should be "Warmly welcome somebody to ***", or "(A) warm welcome to somebody (to ***?)", or any other better
thousand or thousands of | WordReference Forums Hello everyone, Though it should be easy, I doubt whether "thousand of" could be right in English I always thought that before preposition "of" thousand should be countable (therefore thousands) This is the context: "Jobs done by professional secretaries include writing thousand of
I´m the General Manager of in at | WordReference Forums Also, "I work in the New York office" or "I work at the New York office" but always "I work at headquarters " (OK, possibly "I work out of headquarters," but that's a bit more colloquial ) I can see why you're confused, fan