Not unless you want stamps sticking on your foreheads. But what you should have said is difficult to assess because I don't know what you want to say: Send us a cheque send a cheque with our letter? We are sending a cheque?
Yes, it is grammatically correct to say "Please do send us the driver's name." It is a polite way to ask someone to provide the driver's name.
"Please send us copies of the sheet." would be a better sentence.
yes, they must specify "USD" on the cheque they write, or money order they send.
directly at the bank from where the cards were issued, or send them ( the bank) a cheque and make sure the acct number is on the cheque
"Have it sent" is the correct form in standard English.
The correct grammar is "You didn't have to send us anything." Using "nothing" is a double negative and is considered grammatically incorrect.
Every bank cheque has a validity of 6 months from the date of issue of cheque. Let us say you issue a cheque to somebody on Jan 1st, till June 30th the cheque is valid. From July 1st the cheque is expired.
Do you want us to send you a reply?
Do you want us to send you a reply?
It means, issuing a cheque that has a date that is past today's date. Let us say you issue a cheque today, May 28th 2009 and mark the cheque date as June 10th 2009, it means you have issued a post dated cheque.
A Post Dated Cheque is one in which the cheque date will be after todays date. Let us say I give you a cheque today with date October 15th 2011, then it will be a post dated cheque. The point here is that you cannot cash that cheque before October 15th and it can be cashed only on or after the date written on the cheque.
The usual expression is 'send us.'The 'to' is implied. e.g. Please send (to) us a postcard when you arrive!In some situations you should use 'to.' e.g. Please send it to us. But in almost all other situations we say 'send us'.----------The rule is simple: when the Direct Object comes immediately after the verb, then the Indirect Object is introduced by the preposition TO (for instance: Give the letter to us); when the Indirect Object follows the verb you should not used TO (for ex: Give us the letter). Pay attention to the WORD ORDER.