Yes, but more grammatical is "Any information you might provide would be welcome."
The technical verb would be welcomed but both welcomed and welcome can be adjectives referring to the noun information.
Another version of this request is "Any information you might provide would be greatly appreciated."
It is not correct to say it exactly that way, but it would be correct to say, "We warmly welcome you to our company." In this case, "warmly" is an adverb modifying "welcome" used as a verb. It would also be correct to say, "We would like to extend a warm welcome to our company." In this case, "warm" is an adjective modifying "welcome" used as a noun.
Typically the correct wording would be 'welcome' but it depends on whether your felt welcomed or welcome.
If you are responding to someone's thanks, you should say "you're welcome." In this case, you are using the contraction for "you are." It would be correct, however, if you were telling someone, "you have worn out your welcome." In this instance, it is a possessive pronoun.
The correct usage would be "Welcome to the Martin's" Just for your info: If you are trying to describe something as belonging to the family "The Martin's" that is how you use it. It would be "Martins'" only if a "Martin" was a singular thing and several "martins" are owning something...for instance: "The Martins' bodies were green"...hope that helps.
It would be better to say, 'I am forwarding this mail, for your information.', or 'We are forwarding this mail for your information.'
yes it is.
The correct way would be to say "you are very welcome."
It is not correct to say it exactly that way, but it would be correct to say, "We warmly welcome you to our company." In this case, "warmly" is an adverb modifying "welcome" used as a verb. It would also be correct to say, "We would like to extend a warm welcome to our company." In this case, "warm" is an adjective modifying "welcome" used as a noun.
The correct answer is "You're Welcome." Because technically, if you took out the apostrophe, it would say "you are welcome."
The correct answer is "You're Welcome." Because technically, if you took out the apostrophe, it would say "you are welcome."
Typically the correct wording would be 'welcome' but it depends on whether your felt welcomed or welcome.
If you are responding to someone's thanks, you should say "you're welcome." In this case, you are using the contraction for "you are." It would be correct, however, if you were telling someone, "you have worn out your welcome." In this instance, it is a possessive pronoun.
"Welcome to our website" in Dutch is "Welkom op onze website."
The correct word is "information." The word "informations" is rarely used and is considered nonstandard in English.
You say wilkommen or will koe men it means welcome and to say welcome to it would be wilkommen Zu but I don't think Germans use it in that order but they just might!
The correct answer is limestone in a warm, wet climate.Your Welcome! :D
The correct usage would be "Welcome to the Martin's" Just for your info: If you are trying to describe something as belonging to the family "The Martin's" that is how you use it. It would be "Martins'" only if a "Martin" was a singular thing and several "martins" are owning something...for instance: "The Martins' bodies were green"...hope that helps.