
"forward to" vs "forward it to" - WordReference Forums
2015年1月13日 · You may send me more information (preferably in the form of several relevant screen-cap ture images photos if possible) and I will forward it to GS immediately. However, he was writing a very quick email to one one of his [fellow] employees, the message was a simple instruction and he therefore wrote with brevity and speed ignoring the finer ...
"I forwarded to you" vs "I forwarded you" - WordReference Forums
2017年12月15日 · Forward the email me. Forward to me the email. If one of the objects is omitted, such as when it has come before the verb in connection with a relative clause, it can help to clarify which object is present, by using the preposition for he …
Going forward vs. Moving forward - WordReference Forums
2020年3月3日 · B: In this case, "going forward" or "moving forward", who should I report to? "In this case" doesn't fit that sentence. I think "going forward" makes the most sense of those options. "Moving forward" is often said after some kind of dispute, where "moving forward" reflects an attempt to leave the bad feelings behind.
forward on to / forward to - WordReference Forums
2017年1月21日 · Someone asks you if you have certain data, which he needs, and you say yes. Which would you say, 1 or 2? What's the difference between them? 1. I'll be forwarding them on to you. 2. I'll be forwarding them to you.
look forward to/for - WordReference Forums
2010年1月22日 · It's definitely looking forward to, it's an idiom. I checked various dictionaries, it's always something like to anticipate with pleasure. to look forward for might be used where you mean to look forward to be a metaphor for to concentrate on the future, and for to be a normal prepositional use. For example: I am looking forward for my children ...
put back/forward push back/forward (schedule/event etc.)
2020年7月6日 · put forward 4. To change the scheduled time of some event to an earlier time: They put the meeting forward from 4:00 to 2:30. 5: To postpone some event: We put the surprise party forward by an hour or so everyone could attend. push back 2.
keep me on copy - how to say it very polite? - WordReference …
2009年4月15日 · Hello, I would like to write the same sentence in a polite form. I finally got a proper e-mail account. Please keep me on copy in all the refer to editorial and sound departamets. Thank you very much, Rebeca Can I say that?
Look forward to - WordReference Forums
2007年1月8日 · "We are looking forward to" is followed by a noun or a noun phrase. "We are looking forward to Christmas" or "We are looking forward to our vacation in the Bahamas". If a verb is involved it must be a gerund -- a verb acting as a noun and usually ending in "ing". I am looking forward to working on my tan in the Bahamas.
move the meeting up an hour | WordReference Forums
2007年11月8日 · Interesting - for me I haven't heard this phrase before, and like Emma, would have assumed (wrongly apparently) that the meeting to be held later in time, but unlike Emma for me "move the meeting forward an hour" would mean "to be held earlier" (whereas "to move the meeting back an hour" would mean "later").
look forward to working / look forward to work> with you [look …
2013年11月27日 · It's always a noun or a pronoun after "look forward to". "Working" is a gerund and therefore a noun. "Reply" is a noun, so "I look forward to your reply" is correct, and should not be seen as an 'exception'. "It" is a pronoun, so "I look forward to it" is correct.