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Guest Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

HELP?

Hi, I am new to this..but I'd love your help. I am writing a letter and I am stuck on the wording of a paragraph. Do you say, "thank you for haven given me," or thank you for having given me." Please help! Thanks a million.
Sonia
  

Top answer

" The dots mean that you need to add more to the sentence because it is incomplete as it stands. Good luck on your letter.

  • " The dots mean that you need to add more to the sentence because it is incomplete as it stands.
  • Good luck on your letter.
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3 Answers
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You use "Thank you for having given me ....." or "Thank you for giving me ....."
The dots mean that you need to add more to the sentence because it is incomplete as it stands.

Good luck on your letter.
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Thank you for having given me a tip/a cake/some money/a gift. Is this the sense of this sentence?
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Yes. "Thank you for giving me a tip / a cake / ..." has the same sense and is more commonly used.

CJ

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