Not really. When you use "should be," that implies a future time, whereas "now" implies a present. You are better off saying "Kindly note that the car is ready for shipment now." Or, if there is some delay, then you would use "should be"-- Kindly note that, barring unforeseen delays, the car should be ready for shipment within the next two days."
Load Available Date. when the shipment will be ready, at earliest, for shipment by the customer for the carrier.
After goods are ready for shipment they will be taken to
when your shipment unloaded at final destination on final port and shipment ready to port to door means gate out full.
When he arrived I was ready to go is correct
It depends upon what you are trying to say. I am ready for breakfast. I am ready to eat. Both of those are correct. In general you can be ready for (noun) and ready to (verb).
"When he arrived I was ready to go" and "when he arrived I was ready to leave" are both correct
yes
Do you know when my car will be ready.
Yes, that is correct.
While tracking a consignment it you see OTB, it means your shipment is Over The Board (ready for Departure)...
Then kiss him. Bit first you should decide if you're ready or not. If you don't feel like you're ready to go that far, the just kindly tell him that you want to wait a little longer and that you're not ready yet. If you feel comfortable kissing him, then go for it! Just don't rush things to much. It can ruin the setting and the kiss.
There is no correct or easy way to alert someone about death. I would kindly pull them aside when both you and they are ready to deal with this. Sadly alert them, and apologize. Allow to pay for any reparations and maybe offer to buy them a new dog.