i mean i wanted to thanks because someone don,t forget me
The correct phrase is "thank you for taking the time to meet with my colleagues and me." "Myself" should not be used unless it is the subject of the sentence.
No, the sentence is not correct. The pronoun 'I' is the first person subject pronoun; the pronoun 'me' is the first person object pronoun. The sentence should read:I want to thank you for taking time to meet Mariam and me last week.
No, it is not correct. The correct way to phrase it would be "Thank you to all of you."
No, the sentence "Thank you John" is not grammatically correct. It should be written as "Thank you, John." Adding the comma after "thank you" separates the person's name as an interjection in the sentence.
Thank you for your correction is the correct way to use your proper English. You are welcome for my correction.
It's not so much the grammar as an issue with the word choice. Replacing "out" with "the" or "some" produces a much more natural sounding sentence that is more likely to be something a native English speaker would say. Examples: Thank you very much for finding the time to meet me. Thank you very much for finding some time to meet me.
The answer is "Thank you for meeting with my colleagues and me." A tip for remembering this usage is to eliminate the word "colleagues." Then the statement becomes, "Thanks for meeting with I," which of course sounds wrong. That tells you that the correct pronoun is "me."
me
Meet with Scott and I
Sly and the Family Stone sang "Thank You For Letting Me Be Myself".
Yes, the sentence is correct. The subject 'I' is inferred. Thank is the verb. You is the object. 'Taking the time to facilitate the training session' noun clause, object of the preposition 'for'.
I want to thank you for taking time to meet Mariam and me last week. You can tell because if you take out Mariam does the sentence sound okay.
The first thank you is correct.
No, the sentence is not correct. The pronoun 'I' is the first person subject pronoun; the pronoun 'me' is the first person object pronoun. The sentence should read:I want to thank you for taking time to meet Mariam and me last week.
"Thank you for delivering it to me yesterday"
These letters are written to thank colleagues for all the help or friendship during your time working with them. It is also to mention the excitement you have to be moving up and working for the same company.
Thank You not Thank-You is the correct form to use.
Letters of thanks can be sent to colleagues from a person who is leaving a company. This letter would be either formal or informal, depending on how well they know each other, and would thank the colleagues for being there for them.