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  • Which one is correct: please find the attached file or please find . . .
    With great respect, "please find the attached (anything)…" is at best, silly By itself, "Please find attached the file" is meaningless but it might show you the correct form Where is the rest of the sentence, which should have given that part meaning? "Please find attached the file (FileName)" would work but why did you not realise the
  • Emails with Attachments - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    1 How about "Please see the attached documents" and then if you feel the need to name each one you can simply list Ex "Please see the attached documents: item 1, item 2 etc " (Check the correct punctuation for using lists however, ex : or ; or ,)
  • Saying that the mail has an attached form filled up by me?
    Let's say I'm writing a letter to a university and my mail has an application form attached to it How can I say it in a more formal and concise way than "Please see the attached application form t
  • Whats the shortest abbreviation for see attachment or see enclosed . . .
    In French I just write "cf pj", which means "see attachment" What's the shortest abbreviation in English for "see attachment", "see enclosed file" or anything equivalent in an e-mail?
  • formality - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    0 votes Informal: Please see the attached document Formal: Please find attached the agreement
  • Usage of Please see - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    2 Please see X or sometimes just see X is commonly used to refer a reader to another document or another part of this document, normally one that contains additional detail For example, in an email containing a spreadsheet attachment one might write: In light of poor sales figures (please see attached spreadsheet), we think that
  • Is it correct to use this expression in an email: Attached you may . . .
    Like, "You may want to read this" is a suggestion, while "Read this" is an order But on second reading I can see that it could be taken as "the document might or might not be here, please look and see if you can find it" It probably is better to use an alternative softener, like "please find", etc
  • politeness - Please Find Attached or Please Find Enclosed in a . . .
    Please find attached "Monthly status report" PDF for your reference would be appropriate; you cannot enclose anything in an email because they don't have envelopes However (in my opinion) a more formal phrasing would be something like Please find the pdf "Monthly status report" attached for your reference or, shortly put Please find the file attached for your reference if it is clear what


















中文字典-英文字典  2005-2009

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