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  • Can you use “the undersigned” and “I” in the same paragraph?
    Using "the undersigned" is kind of legal jargon Legal documentation is its own weird area, and I would argue that it's chock full of style that is pretty awful If there's some legal reason you can't just use "I" as the subject of both sentences, it would be stylistically better to combine the ideas into one sentence
  • Should I write X and I, X and me, I and X, or me and X in a . . .
    A helpful trick for determining whether to use I or me in a multi-person scenario is to take the other people out of the sentence If you still have a valid sentence at that point, then you have the correct pronoun For example, with the sentence Samuel was with Susan and I, you take out Susan, leaving you with the sentence Samuel was with I Hopefully you can tell immediately that this is
  • phrase usage - I would like to inform you vs This is to inform you . . .
    While writing any kind of emails (ex business emails) I have seen many people, when informing about something to the other person, starting their email with the following 2 sentences (one or the o
  • proper nouns - I and John vs. John and myself vs. John and I . . .
    "I and John" vs "John and myself" vs "John and I" -- Which is the acceptable way to refer to myself and my friend?
  • I have read and agree agreed with the terms and conditions
    I agree, I believe both are correct However, I would use to instead of with: I've read and agree agreed 'to' the terms and conditions Agreeing TO them says you've agreed to follow them Whereas agreeing WITH says you agree that they are right - I'm not sure I've phrased this too well, but agreeing WITH is more what you would say if you were proof reading the terms conditions, rather than
  • Verbs tense agreement with have found out
    It looks like both sentences below are correct as far as the tenses are concerned if checked by MS Word grammar check But which is quot;more quot; correct, so to speak? I was surprised to find out
  • grammar - If you have any question (s) - English Language Learners . . .
    Yes, it is correct "If you have any questions, please let me know " In this sentence any means some several more than one "If you have any question (whatsoever), please let me know " Here any question can be replaced with a question of any kind -> If you have a question of any kind please let me know Just like the article states, it is used for emphasis It's a way to indicate importance
  • Have Vs Has when using with name of a team
    Which of the two sentences are grammatically correct? Ferrari has been struggling this season Or Ferrari have been struggling this season According to my understanding, 'has' is what I should
  • expressions - A query about closing line in mails - English Language . . .
    I generally use this sentence at the end my email before signature: 'Please let me know in case of any queries ' Is this phrase correct to use for closing a mail?
  • First person I and we used in same paragraph [closed]
    The protagonist often switches between I and we (royal we) But I'm not sure if it's grammatically correct to switch in the same paragraph Edit Two of many similar examples: "I loved your fat





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