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As long as there is a period on the end, yes, it is.

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15y ago

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Related Questions

Is 'speak with you' grammatically correct?

This is not acceptable in English English but it may be in American. (Americans say: meet with you. In England we say: meet you.)


Which one is correct It was a pleasure to meet with you or it was a pleasure meeting you?

Both are correct, but "It was a pleasure meeting you" is more commonly used and sounds more natural in conversational English.


Do you say meet with Sarah and me or Sarah and I?

Sarah and I Sarah and I is incorrect. You would not say "Meet with I" so you would not say "Meet with Sarah and I." It is grammatically correct to say "Meet with me." ... Soooo the correct answer is "Meet with Sarah and me." Hint: to figure out when to use I/me take away the other personor pronoun (like we did above) and see if the sentence is still grammatically correct, if so, that is the one you use!


Head off to meet with somebody is a correct grammar?

'Head off to meet with somebody' is correct grammar, although the preposition 'with' can be omitted.


How do you say welcome to power high?

“Good morning.” “Good afternoon.” “Good evening.” “It's nice to meet you.” “It's a pleasure to meet you.”


What does bonne matin mean in English?

'bonne matinée' = [have a] good morning 'de bon matin' = early in the morning ('bonne matin' is not grammatically correct) the common greetings are 'bonjour' (from the morning to the evening) and 'bonsoir' (meaning more specifically good evening). You can say 'bonne matinée' when you are leaving somebody in the morning, but not to greet the people when you meet them.


is this correct look forward to meeting all of you someday as well?

Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct. It conveys a positive expression of anticipation to meet a group of people in the future.


When can you use the word 'chance' in plurals. Is the sentence 'I have had chances to meet many of his students' grammatically correct?

It is incorrect I think. Another possible option would me "I have had many chances to meet his students."


Is this sentence grammatically correct - you will bring folders when you met with the Interviewer?

"met" is a past tense of "to meet", so a request for you to do something in the past doesn't make sense. Replace "met" by "meet".


Is Head off to meet someone will ship out this stuff to Australia grammatically correct?

"Head off to meet someone will ship out this stuff to Australia" is not correct grammar because of the omission of 'who' before 'will'. Personally, I would write "ship this stuff out" or omit the adverb "out" altogether. "Head off to meet someone who will ship this stuff out to Australia." "Head off to meet someone who will ship this stuff to Australia."


What is the best greeting to say when you meet someone?

Pleasure to meet you!


Is this sentence grammatically correct. Our class doesn't fool around we meet our goal?

Well I have no clue what you are trying to say, so I don't think it's correct.Try " Our class doesn't fool around so we meet our goals" or " reach our goals "