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To me this leaves the impression that the writer is not that well educated. It can also leave the feeling of confusion if the writing is hard to understand because of errors in grammar.
You should nearly always correct them. If you had deliberately put them in so as to demonstrate a point, like in preparing notes for an English class, then you might leave them uncorrected. Another case is when you want to use a different spelling to the way the spell-checker is set to test for, which again you might be doing for a demonstration of for a particular people. As it is a one-off, you might leave the spelling checker on your format and ignore the errors, rather than changing them. Spelling checkers might also flag things as errors with technical words or company names or other things that may not be in its dictionary, but which you want to keep. In most instances though, you should correct them.
Be clear and concise in your messaging to ensure the recipient understands your purpose. Use proper grammar, punctuation, and spelling to maintain professionalism. Maintain a polite and respectful tone throughout the letter to leave a positive impression on the reader.
Situations like when you leave a letter out or put one in or put the wrong letter for the word you wanted, but still spell a valid word. Like you leave the u out of four and get for. A spelling checker will not see that as an error. If you wanted car and put cart, the spelling checker will not see that as an error. If you put in instead of on, the sentence could still make sense and although it is not the word you want, the spelling checker will not see it as an error. There are many of those kinds of errors. Use a spelling checker, but also proof read the document when you are finished to look for those kinds of errors.
The dialogue sentence, "Molly, our bus won't leave until 7:00" requires punctuation such as quotation marks (" "), a comma, an apostrophe and a colon (time).
That's not incorrect, but "Who are those who leave" would be better.
That is the correct spelling of "omit" (to leave out).
*flinching from horrific grammar* yes i think so
No. Leave out "closer to" and it's fine.
The correct spelling is furlough (temporary leave).
The correct spelling is abandon (leave, desert).
Please find attached the leave schedule of all staff for the holiday