No. When and is used to join the elements in a compound subject, the compound subject is treated as plural.
The mail and the attached refer...
Try this: Attached is a letter and invoice.
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)."
It would be better to say, 'I am forwarding this mail, for your information.', or 'We are forwarding this mail for your information.'
I would suggest "Please see attached for your reference" or "Please see attached for more information".
Well, honey, the email either refers to something or it doesn't. So yes, it's correct to say the email refers to something if it actually does. But if it's just a bunch of gibberish, then no, it's not correct to say that. Simple as that, sweetheart.
The correct way to say it would be: Tyler's and my resumes are attached. It would probably be simpler to just say: Our resumes are attached.
You can say that
in the mail belo
yes
Try this: Attached is a letter and invoice.
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)."
While there is technically nothing wrong with that sentence, proper syntax would say, "The file is attached."
Yes, it is correct to say "Please find the attached copy of the proposal." This phrase is commonly used in business correspondence to indicate that a document is included with the message.
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's a formal way to say it.
Grammatically correct, but not right. We say "Please find a copy of your diploma 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.