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- word usage - Emailed as a verb (vs sent email) - English Language . . .
I've started to see 'emailed' a lot in our company correspondence but as a non-native speaker I always tend to use 'sent email' instead Here are some examples from reliable sources: “I worked wit
- Which is correct — email me [on at] x@y. com?
Which variant is the correct one: email me on xxx@xxx com email me at xxx@xxx com email me to xxx@xxx com Or should another preposition go there?
- Email me and mail to me - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I cannot understand the question Are you claiming that “send me an e-mail” and “send a mail to me” are correct but “send me a mail” and “send an e-mail to me” are incorrect? If so, I doubt that claim
- Is re-email an actual word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The principal reason you won't find every valid re- word in a dictionary is becuase re- is a productive prefix, which can easily be used to form words with a predictable meaning -- as long as the meaning is the most obvious "repeat" Thus re-email would mean to send another email I doubt that you can make re-email into a noun, though, which is what the preposition by requires
- formality - Formal way to tell someone they accidentally sent you . . .
I have received an email from someone at work He’s quite senior and probably would get quite angry to get an “accusing” message like: I wasn’t supposed to get this email It looks like you sent
- e-mail me or e-mail to me? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
"E-mail me the check" sounds right to me, and "e-mail to me the check" does not "E-mail the check to me" however, does sound correct This is typical of ditransitive verbs in English: there is a choice between "me" as a direct object (without a preposition) and an indirect object (with a preposition), but the choice is often dictated by things like word order and whether or not the objects
- Use whom in emails? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Assume for a moment that an author does know how to use whom correctly In an email (specifically), does using whom correctly make the author sound stuffy and formal, or would you say that in email,
- Emailed with an apology. . . ? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
If it was just; emailed an apology, I would assume that the whole email was an apology But from that sentence I understand that there was some other content together with an apology in the email
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