Almost but not quite. The grammatically correct wording is "Please see the attached agenda." As a shorthand, you could also say "Please see agenda (attached)."
agenda is attached
It should be "Please find attached my husband's insurance card".
Please find attached my repairing offer confirmation.
Please find attached the leave schedule of all staff for the holiday
This is correct if somewhat archaic grammar, "find" meaning "see" -- the one extra word is the repeated "please" on the second independent clause, which results from combining two sentences. In modern English, one might say "Please see the attached photos of my paintings, on which I would appreciate your feedback."
agenda is attached
It would be grammatically correct to say: Please find the attached.... it does not make much sense to write both kindly and please since both almost mean the same.
It should be "Please find attached my husband's insurance card".
Please find attached my repairing offer confirmation.
Please find attached the leave schedule of all staff for the holiday
The grammar in "Is this grammar correct for your action immediately please" is not correct. A more grammatically accurate way to phrase the question would be, "Is this grammar correct for your immediate action, please?"
The grammar in your sentence is mostly correct, but there are minor adjustments needed for clarity and punctuation. It should read: "Please find attached a Preliminary Invoice for your reference. Be aware that this is not a final invoice." Removing "an" before "attached" improves the flow, and there should be no space before the period after "invoice."
This is correct if somewhat archaic grammar, "find" meaning "see" -- the one extra word is the repeated "please" on the second independent clause, which results from combining two sentences. In modern English, one might say "Please see the attached photos of my paintings, on which I would appreciate your feedback."
The grammar is not correct. A more correct way to phrase it would be: "Please return the document to me after signing."
No, the phrase "kindly find attached for your signature" is not grammatically correct. In order to make this sentence correct, you will need to state what is attached, such as "kindly find the contract attached for your signature."
" Please find the attached file of your application letter for administration position " . It is grammatically correct however the contextually questionable.If you are sending an application filled by you then :"Please find the attached file of the application letter for the administration position "
Yes.But the sentence would be better if you said what is attached.Please add new vendor see attached file. or see attachment.