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Nancy19820 Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

Are these consistently grammatically correct? I'm confused please help.

- Have two speakers instead of three
- Have a/the reception at different location, maybe at a restaurant in our town square (Is "a" or "the"?)
- Have it at a different time, maybe in/on the morning reception (Is "on" or "in"?)
- Follow up with an email and phone call to those who RSVP (Do I need "to" here?)
- Emphasize free food on/in the invitation (Is "on" or "in" the invitation?)

- RSVP by a week, not two and half weeks before a/the reception (Do I need a comma? Is "a" or "the"?)
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Separate the RSVP form and/from the flyer (Should I use from" or "and"?)

Thank you very much for your help.
  

Top answer

Since you are talking about an event with a reception, I would refer to "the reception," because it's shared knowledge with your audience. " yes, "to those who RSVP" in/on the invitation - this one could go either way. It may be regional variation.

  • Since you are talking about an event with a reception, I would refer to "the reception," because it's shared knowledge with your audience.
  • " yes, "to those who RSVP" in/on the invitation - this one could go either way.
  • It may be regional variation.
  • " Set the RSVP date at one week prior to the event, not two and half weeks prior.
  • and/from - in this case, you can use either.
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1 Answers
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Since you are talking about an event with a reception, I would refer to "the reception," because it's shared knowledge with your audience.

"in the morning."

yes, "to those who RSVP"

in/on the invitation - this one could go either way. It may be regional variation. I personally would use "in."

Set the RSVP date at one week prior to the event, not two and half we

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