The guitar soloist at the memorial played a tune that was somber yet beautiful.
"He announced to everyone that he was getting married tomorrow."
I've got a serious stack of faxes to file. The faxes are coming! The faxes are coming! Your faxes have not yet arrived.
No. The correct sentence is: We have not received your reply. (The word "yet" is not really necessary, but it is grammatically correct to write : We have not received your reply yet.) It is customary to write R.S.V.P. on invitations to which you expect a reply. This is French (Repondez s'il vous plait) for "Please reply." Many people also include a self-addressed stamped card so that the invitees can conveniently reply at no cost to themselves.
1) I still haven't received any mail from you. 2) I have yet to receive any mail from you.
No branch! And yet, all of them (Allow me to explain). Citi is not a clearing bank in the UK; therefore, they use Lloyds TSB for this facility as an intermediary. All Citibank accounts, irrespective of the branch, use this sort code. If you don't use this, your funds will be lost in the ether of the UK financial system. Paying in books for Citi refer to sort code 30-00-00 (again Lloyds TSB); DON'T use this as your funds will probably end up in a holding account and therefore, difficult to trace and return/apply.
Yes, "have" can be used twice in a sentence. For example: "I have been told that I have to complete the assignment by tomorrow."
I'm not trilingual yet!
I have not yet studied on dichotomy.
Has he gained consciousness yet?
No, because if he isn't a bachelor 'yet', then what is he? Yet in this example would make no sense, and the sentence would not make sense. But you can say: He is not divorced yet. She is not twenty-one years old yet.
The blueprint was not sketched yet for the building.
That was the best performance yet!
The question is good, yet it could be reworded. The path was dark yet I slowly found my way
The question is good, yet it could be reworded. The path was dark yet I slowly found my way
dont know yet but wen i do ill tell you
Her words were the catalyst for my sudden, yet, percise actions.
The pirate had his blunderbuss loaded for the fight yet to come.