Both constructions are correct, but "I am very much looking forward to meeting you" is more commonly used and sounds more natural.
"Sitting down" is correct. The phrase "looking forward for a chance to sit down" should be revised to "looking forward to a chance to sit down" for proper grammar.
Yes, "Looking forward to a positive response" is the correct sentence. "For" should be changed to "to" to make it grammatically accurate.
The correct punctuation is: "The meeting will be held at the Smiths'." The apostrophe comes after the "s" to show possession by a plural noun.
No, the sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be: "I will take notes at the meeting." Remember to capitalize the first letter of the sentence and add a space after the period.
No, the correct subject-verb agreement should be: "Is either your mother or your father coming to the meeting?" In this sentence, 'is' matches with 'either', which is singular.
Almost. It would be correct of you to say "I look forward to seeing you all soon," changing the verb "see" into its gerund form, "seeing."
No. The expression "looking forward" takes the preposition "to." Also, instead of consideration, reply or positive reply will be more suitable in the sentence.
We normally say "looking forward hearing from you". It should have a preposition before the pronoun. It would be more proper to say "looking forward to hearing from you." This is called gerund, basically adding -ing to the verb, then followed by a preposition.
No!"You look forward to doing business with you" would be grammatically correct.I assume that you really wanted to ask whether "I look forward to do business with you" is correct and this brain-dead web site insisted on changing "I" to "you." Even in this case, you should change "to do" into "to doing."I look forward to doing business with you.If you really meant to ask about "You look forward to do business with you," then you should change "to do" into "to doing" to fix the grammar and change the second "you" into "yourself" to make the sentence clearer.You look forward to doing business with yourself.
That is your own personal decision, if you like him then I can see no reason why you wouldn't wish to see him again in the future.
No, not quite. You should say: I look forward to working with you in the future.
Grilled Meat
When recording minutes of a meeting, professional language and tone should always be used. This is a document that portrays to anyone not in attendance of the meeting what happened in the meeting.
according to Robert's Rule of Order: "If minutes are not habitually approved at the next meeting, then there should be written at the end of the minutes the word "Approved" and the date of the approval, which should be signed by the secretary."
You should always be looking behind you when backing up. You don't look forward when reversing because you're not moving in a forward direction.
One should say I look forward to continuing to grow our partnership. One is always looking forward "to" something, so the word "to" should always be used in that type of sentence.
The pronoun 'I' is the first person subjective; the pronoun 'you' is the second person, subjective or objective. The correct pronouns for the sentence are 'You and I'.Correct: You or I have to attend the meeting.Correct: The meeting is mandatory for you or me.The pronoun me is the first person objective pronoun, used for the object of the verb or object of a preposition.