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Vsuresh Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

idiomatic

Hi
Please tell if this is common among native speakers. In our place we use it at the end of the resume

"I hereby state that all the information I have given about me here are true to the best of my knowledge and belief."
  

Top answer

" I am not a native.

  • " I am not a native.
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7 Answers
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"I hereby state that all the information I have given about me myself here are true to the best of my knowledge and belief."

I am not a native.
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"I hereby state (typically the word "certify" is used instead of state) that all the information I have given here about me myself is here are true ("and correct" is typically added) to the best of my knowledge and belief."

You can also replace "given here" with "provided."

I would probably write the follo
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Please tell if this is common among native speakers.

No. I've never see a resume with that.
The person who reads your resume will just automatically assume all that.

Clive
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ClivePlease tell if this is common among native speakers. No. I've never seen a resume with that.
Me neither.

CJ
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At the end of a resume no, as part of an application form, yes.
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. . . all the information I have given about myself here is true . . .
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CliveNo. I've never see a resume with that.The person who reads your resume will just automatically assume all that.
I agree. I wouldn't add any statement like that unless specifically requested or legally obliged. Drawing attention to the issue just risks raising doubts in the reader's mind.

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