She must report to headquarters at 7:30 am on Monday morning.
You report on something. You write a report about something, or on something.
report means nothing in this sentence. The word you are looking for is rapport and it means a relationship or bond with the customer.
An FPCAM is a down channeled report from higher headquarters informing personnel of a change in readiness posture
No. Correct grammar would be "Please forward your report by today at the latest." But it is absurd - no one can hand in a report yesterday. Use Please submit your report by the end of the day today.
Please send the report to Dennis and I by Friday.
She must report to headquarters at 7:30 AM Mon morning.
Him and I have a report to do.
You report on something. You write a report about something, or on something.
Yes it is.
IS, not ARE: "A full description of his conduct and activities is given in this report." (description is given)
No. Instead say, "Please see the attached report" or "The report is attached". "Attache" is not the proper form in English for a past participle, the grammatical entity needed in these sentence.
No, no and no! NEVER use "myself" instead of "me." Use "myself" ONLY when the subject of the sentence or the clause is "I".
Yes, but it sounds like "officialese" which is unnecessarily wordy, pompous and oblique. Avoid is+adjective constructions generally, and use a verb instead: her report differs from his.
"Due" refers to something that is owed or expected, as in "The report is due tomorrow." In contrast, "dew" refers to the moisture that forms on surfaces in the early morning, such as in the sentence "The grass was covered in dew after the night rain." Using both in a sentence: "The flowers glistened with dew in the morning light, just as the payment was due."
gauge gauge
no
The proper grammar is "report was run."