"Thank you for your attention" could be a suitable alternative phrase to use in professional or formal communication.
If you are standing beside someone you are said to be standing "at his side," and you would say "he is at my side." You would be standing beside each other, or "side by side."
In the context of arts well-noted means distinguished. A well-noted performer has a good reputation or is famous. Other synonyms are: celebrated, eminent, famed, famous, illustrious, notable, preeminent, renowned. Placed in context: .....A well-noted or celebrated musician; an eminent scholar; a famed scientist; a famous actor; an illustrious judge; a notable historian; a preeminent archaeologist; a renowned painter. In a legal context well noted means "I have taken note of your comment" or "I will keep your suggestion in mind". Example: "Please be informed that today our office is closed." In reply you could answer: "Well noted with thanks." Less formal would be: "Thanks for your notification" or "Thanks for notifying in advance".
The stood beside each other.
it could if there are any other signs
It is time for us to turn to each other, not on each other. (Jesse Jackson)
Beside is a preposition. Other examples are over, up, down, across, to, and under.
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thanks cheers thanks cheers thanks cheers
no
it depends - as it often does in Irish beside the sea/river etc is "cois" for most other things it is "in aice"
"Thanks for crossing your mind" typically expresses gratitude to someone for thinking of or considering something related to the speaker. It suggests appreciation for the person’s thoughtfulness or acknowledgment. The phrase can imply that the speaker values the other person's input or feelings, even if it was just a fleeting thought.
yes they can live beside each other i have a tank in the hexagon with all of them beside each other. they will try to fight still but that is normal.