Usually, the phrase is simply "on behalf of", without "the".
Yes, the sentence is correct. It conveys that you are offering thanks to someone on behalf of your sister.
No, it is not correct.It is correct to say "back home"
In conjunction with
No, it is not grammatically correct. The correct way to say it is "your older sister."
No. If you are trying to say that you have the same opinion as another person, the correct way to say it is "I agree with you."
Never, but NEVER use "myself" in this way. We say "On behalf of so-and-so and me." The reflexive pronoun myself is NOT a more formal form of the objectivepronoun "me."
Depends on what your talkin about but usally onbehave
Yes, the sentence is correct. It conveys that you are offering thanks to someone on behalf of your sister.
On behalf of is "au nom de ..." or "pour le compte de ..." in French.
If someone is not available to speak for themselves, a person might say "on the behalf of *so and so* I would like to thank you...", or "on the behalf of *so and so* I am informing you...", or "on the behalf of *so and so* I am requesting...".
If someone is not available to speak for themselves, a person might say "on the behalf of *so and so* I would like to thank you...", or "on the behalf of *so and so* I am informing you...", or "on the behalf of *so and so* I am requesting...".
En nombre de _____________
In the behalf of means that you are doing something (let's say gathering money) for people who will be benefited of that (let's say the poor children) I am saving paper in the behalf of the future generations. It is a little bit similar to the preposition ON BEHALF OF, that means you are doing something (let's say signing a paper) but you are only representing somebody else (let's say your boss) I am calling you on behalf of Mr. Ramirez. Even though both have different uses, sometimes they are used one instead of the other with no major concern. Hope this help. LUIGGI In the behalf of means that you are doing something (let's say gathering money) for people who will be benefited of that (let's say the poor children) I am saving paper in the behalf of the future generations. It is a little bit similar to the preposition ON BEHALF OF, that means you are doing something (let's say signing a paper) but you are only representing somebody else (let's say your boss) I am calling you on behalf of Mr. Ramirez. Even though both have different uses, sometimes they are used one instead of the other with no major concern. Hope this help. LUIGGI
Speaking on behalf of Freaks, I would say "English" followed by a vulgarity
Valedictorian.
It is not correct, you have to say on the beach.
Is it correct to say no one cares?