Oh, what a lovely sentiment you've shared! It's almost correct, just a little tweak needed. You can say, "We are looking forward to seeing you. Until then, take care!" Keep spreading that positivity and warmth with your words.
Grammatically you mean? Yes, it is correct.
no not really it's most likely saying looking forward seeing you or to see you
Looking out the window and seeing the rain confirmed that it was a dreary day.
The second phrase - "looking forward to your reply" is correct.Used as an adverb, forward refers to a time in the future or a direction, normally in front.The phrase for ward has no specific meaning out of context, and requires some minor contortions to use in a sentence: "How many polling places are ready for ward 2?" "We bought a cake for Ward because it's his birthday."
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."
"I am looking forward to seeing you." Is a correct sentence.
The correct phrase would be, "I look forward to seeing you."
I believe the words you are looking for are, "We were looking forward to seeing you." That is the past tense of, "We are looking forward to seeing you."
Grammatically you mean? Yes, it is correct.
no not really it's most likely saying looking forward seeing you or to see you
Yes, it is correct to say "looking forward to seeing you" as it conveys anticipation and excitement for an upcoming meeting or encounter. It is a common and polite way to express your eagerness to meet someone.
Yes, the sentence "you saw your uncle and aunt come out" is grammatically correct. It describes the action of seeing both your uncle and aunt exiting from a place.
Looking out the window and seeing the rain confirmed that it was a dreary day.
Yes, "I am looking forward to seeing you all" is grammatically correct. It shows anticipation and excitement for meeting or reuniting with a group of people.
"Where was Jack yesterday" is correct but the sentence needs to end with a question mark (?), not a period (.). He might have been seeing a doctor is the correct way to write the second sentence.
Examples: I'm looking forward to seeing you. I'm looking forward to my new job. I'm looking forward to my bright future. I'm look forwards and upwards.
You're looking at a list, and you can't decide which item on it is the correct one. But you expect me to pick the correct one without even seeing the list. That doesn't compute.