0So far, I've been using this sentence in my official mail01b01del00s02del02b00 whenever I send e-mail to my American clients. I want to be sure 01del00whether02del00 01b00that02b00 my American clients really 01del00understood02del00 01b00understand 02b00what I 01del00tried02del00 try to say. 02br 02br 00I don't mean to pick on anyone's grammar. I'm doing this as a grammar exercise. The above seems to have a few grammatical mistakes which I have highlighted. Please correct me if I'm wrong.0-
Top answer
02br 00I would make a couple of other changes: I don't think you need "in my official mail", and you could equally say "01b 00what I say02b 00". 0-
— Feebs11
02br 00I would make a couple of other changes: I don't think you need "in my official mail", and you could equally say "01b 00what I say02b 00".
0-
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.
0 Looks ok.02br 00I would make a couple of other changes: I don't think you need "in my official mail", and you could equally say "01b00what I say02b00". 0-
0IMO:02br 01i00... really understand what I'm 01b00trying02b00 to say02i02br 00seems more "pro-active" to me. 02br 00See at the New York Times:02br 00 1 from nytimes.com for "understand what I try to"02br 00 567 from nytimes.com for "understand 01b00what I'm trying to02b00"