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  1. 2012年10月20日 · Can I say "By the way" in an official document or professional meeting and other important/formal times? I never saw any film which would include these words.

  2. Learn the best practices for greeting multiple recipients in an e-mail from the experts and peers on English Language & Usage Stack Exchange.

  3. I'm wondering what is the best way to express that an email contains an attachment. I'd like to have a formal example, and an informal example. For example: Is this informal? Attached you can ...

  4. 2011年8月22日 · I would like to use examples of the two sentences above in an email directed to an organization, but I would like to avoid using "you" or "bug", if possible. For more context, this is part of an email where we are requesting this organization to fix a service that they provide to us.

  5. A very formal way to say this would be to write "I look forward to seeing you there". My (German/Canadian) company uses this as a standard phrase for invitations we send out to customers. In the rare case where you have not met the colleague you have an appointment with in person before, you might write "I look forward to meeting you." Some Help with Deciding What to Write

  6. 2014年2月7日 · Typically when writing a polite and formal message or email; a longer sentence will sound more courteous and gracious than a two word reply. There are innumerable ways of writing a polite acknowledgement, or a thank-you note. Change the adjectives with ones that you feel more comfortable with. You can use the verb, grasp, instead of understand to say you comprehended something fully, and you ...

  7. 2014年8月26日 · Yes, it's considered formal English usage in business correspondence, and, indeed, it's almost obligatory. I'm hard put to think of any way for one business person to communicate with another entity what to do in the case that a particular effort has mailed to satisfy the entity addressed,, without useing "if", or a much more wordy alternative ...

  8. 2015年6月11日 · In a formal email of the kind where you begin with "Dear Mr. Surname" and finish with "Best regards", for example, should we use the following contractions? Or are the non contracted forms more

  9. However no such rules exist for emails, and using either of these valedictions would seem quite stuffy and overly formal. I'd use them only (if you wished to use them at all) in formal, written correspondence. 'Best regards' is a fairly standard valediction that is neither too formal or too informal and would be suitable for any business email.

  10. english.stackexchange.com › when-to-use-we-versus-i-in-a-professional-emailWhen to use "We" versus "I" in a ...

    2016年5月14日 · I'm trying to explain to a coworker when I use "We" versus "I" in my work emails going outside of the organization, but I don't know myself. For example, Hello, This morning we were unable...

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