looking forward to talking to you or speaking with you.
"I am looking forward to speaking with you."
or
"I look forward to speaking with you."
You can say, 'I am looking forward to being there." or "I look forward to being there."
I would say " I look forward to meeting you." instead of just " Look forward to meeting you." But as far as I am concerned it is just fine and I can be a grammar snob!
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."
That is a correct phrasing, possibly "all of you" if more than one person.
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."
speaking
We look forward to celebrating with you is the correct one.
No, the correct sentence is "I look forward to seeing you." This uses the -ing form after "to" to show the action that you are looking forward to.
Either is grammatically correct. The usual way to say this is, "I am looking forward to talking to you." However, some people think that, "I am looking forward to talking with you." is better when a social conversation is anticipated. If the communication is linear, you use "to" in "talk to" If the communication is transactional, you use "with."
Yes, "I look forward to seeing you" Is correct grammar.
You can say, 'I am looking forward to being there." or "I look forward to being there."
No, not quite. You should say: I look forward to working with you in the future.
It is correct to say "We look forward to hearing from you." As in the sentence " We look forward to their visit.", the word "to" in this idiom is a preposition followed by a noun/ noun phrase.
The correct phrase is "look forward to seeing you on Saturday." This form is the most commonly used and grammatically correct way to express anticipation for seeing someone on a specific day.
I think you're trying to say "I look forward to meeting you."
The first is correct grammar.
I would say " I look forward to meeting you." instead of just " Look forward to meeting you." But as far as I am concerned it is just fine and I can be a grammar snob!