Everyone in the bank, including the manager and the tellers, ran to the door when the alarm rang.
"Mgr" is the correct abbreviation for "manager".
No, the personal pronoun 'I' is the subjective form. The objective form is 'me'In the noun phrase, 'Just between you and me', the pronouns 'you and me' are the object of the preposition 'between'. Use the objective form 'me'.
I was to instruct everyone on how to play the song. I needed to instruct her on the safety at the zoo. Part of her job was to instruct students on what to do.
manager argues -- the simplest, shortest key idea of the sentence.
Can every manager be a leader verses every leader is a manager
The manager criticized your argument for/against the recommendations.
Nearly; it should be:"The manager criticized you for speaking before you heard the facts."
The manager laid the papers on his table is the correct past tense. (to lay)The word "lay" is the past tense of the intransitive verb (to lie, to lie down), e.g. The manager lay on the table (not the papers).
No, "line manager" is not capitalized when used in a sentence unless it begins the sentence.
"He is at affinity with his manager" may be technically correct, but it sounds odd to this native speaker of English. "He agrees with his manager" or "He is a relative of his manager" is more natural.
The manager was in charge of the office.
"Mgr" is the correct abbreviation for "manager".
the manager of the company made a speach.
mngr
No, the personal pronoun 'I' is the subjective form. The objective form is 'me'In the noun phrase, 'Just between you and me', the pronouns 'you and me' are the object of the preposition 'between'. Use the objective form 'me'.
I was to instruct everyone on how to play the song. I needed to instruct her on the safety at the zoo. Part of her job was to instruct students on what to do.
he is a good a=manager..