0
Nokia Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

For your information per your request

"For your information per your request I have decided to go tomorrow."

Someone has asked me to let him know if I decide to go tomorrow. I am writing this text message to him but it sounds awkward (Combining "For your information" and "per your request". Is it actually correct or maybe there is a better way to say it?

Also, is there a difference between "Just to let you know" and "just so you know" (or For your information)?

Thanks.
  

Top answer

nokia it sounds awkward It certainly does. nokia Is it actually correct? It is useless if not obfuscatory besides.

  • nokia it sounds awkward It certainly does.
  • nokia Is it actually correct?
  • It is useless if not obfuscatory besides.
  • nokia maybe there is a better way to say it?
  • Yes.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
nokiait sounds awkward
It certainly does.
nokia Is it actually correct?
It is useless if not obfuscatory besides.
nokiamaybe there is a better way to say it?
Yes. This is quite sufficient:

I have decided to go tomorrow.
nokias there a differen
0
Thanks for the reply. What if I want to emphasize "per your request"?

Also, is "per your request" very formal and for business use?
0
Say '...as you requested.'

'per your request' is dated business language which is mercifully dying out as businesses are increasingly communicating in plain English.

Related Questions