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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

I would like to happily inform you that

"I would like to happily inform that I booked my flight for September 5th."

Is the above sentence correct for showing my happiness and eagerness to a professor with whom I'm going to work during my research opportunity? I wonder where shall the expression be used: should it be a very good news for the person I am talking/writing to or can it be a good thing happened to me myself?

Thank you

  

Top answer

"Is the above sentence correct for showing my happiness and eagerness to a professor with whom I'm going to work during my research opportunity? No. We just don't do that.

  • "Is the above sentence correct for showing my happiness and eagerness to a professor with whom I'm going to work during my research opportunity?
  • No.
  • We just don't do that.
  • anonymous should it be a very good news for the person I am talking/writing to You should NEVER presume that.
  • anonymous can it be a good thing happened to me myself?
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1 Answers
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anonymousI would like to happily inform that I booked my flight for September 5th."Is the above sentence correct for showing my happiness and eagerness to a professor with whom I'm going to work during my research opportunity?

No. We just don't do that.

anonymousshould it be a very good news for the person I am talking/writing to

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