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 "The undersigned respectfully moves to adjourn today's meeting because the
phrase usage - I would like to inform you vs This is to inform you . . . The first is more polite while the second is more impersonal and better suited to a corporate or institutional setting where the recipient might not have a relationship with the writer Both are however too wordy; the recipient knows you're informing her by the fact that you're sending her a message 'Asked for' is also too colloquial for a business or academic setting I'd use 'requested
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
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
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
word in context - The use of I and we used in the same sentence and . . . I don't think it would sound as good, but it is possible to keep the active voice and use both I and we: When I was at church last Sunday with the regular parishioners, we all heard a large explosion from outside This mix of I and we doesn't sound so strange in the single sentence because you introduce the other people (the regular parishioners) before using the plural pronoun
grammar - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Let's say a girl had undergone surgery of the her lips Then you compare her look before and after, could you say:(you're holding 2 photos) This is was her original look, before she undergo lip s
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
meaning - Why does name‑calling mean insulting someone when it . . . The questions suggests a possible misunderstanding of the phrase "name calling " While an idiom, it has always (in my experience) had a specific meaning -- assigning an insulting name to someone, not just insulting them in general An example is "Hey, stupid" -- addressing someone using an insult in place of their name But "You smell like a horse" or "You are dumb as a rock" is not "name